Category Archives: Society

Golden Compass – it’s about sex, really

This weekend, with 70 degrees F in Chapel Hill, it would have bin a sin to remain indoors. So I didn’t. But in the end, at twilight today, my daughter and I went to see Golden Compass, the movie whose first-weekend box-office earnings I wanted to boost.
I made sure not to read any reviews of the movie beforehand. I am, unlike most people who already wrote about it, one of those people who has never read the Pullman books on which the movie is based. Thus, like the majority of the target audience, I was a Pullman “virgin” and I wanted to watch it just like anyone else going out to see a movie on a weekend, with no big expectations.
Of course, there was no escaping knowing at least something about it. Before seeing the movie, I knew that:
– the books are supposed to have a strongly anti-religious sentiment, growing stronger as the story moves to the third book. But, I have no idea if the anti-religious sentiment is against the religion in the sense of belief in the supernatural, or the mythology, or the ceremony, or the community-building aspects (“us versus them”), or the top-down hierarchical structure of the religious organization.
– Pullman is a first-generation (“born-again”) atheist. This gives him a different view of religion than someone like me who was born and raised an atheist, in an atheist family, in an atheist country. His childhood religion colors him as a person, and his adult rebellion against religion also colors him as a person. He knows how it feels to be religious. I don’t. For me, religious people are curiousities, perhaps interesting as potential subjects to study: how is it possible for a human being to believe obvious untruths and how does such belief result in particular anti-social behaviors? It is like starting one’s research career by studying cockroach behavior because you want to eradicate the pest, but after decades of study you realize that you quickly forgot the fact they are pests and got fascinated by their brains, how they work and how they lead to particular cockroach behaviors. Having Gregor Samsa join your research group would be fascinating as he would bring new angles, yet also would bring biases that a merely human researcher cannot have.
– there was a controversy before the movie came out. Atheist groups protested the watering-down of the anti-religious sentiment compared to the books. The most extremely anal political organizations that like to voice their opinions publicly as if they speak for religion, voiced their disapproval of the movie and called for boycotts.
So, that’s all I knew. We got popcorn and sodas and went in.
And then, I loved the movie. It was fast-moving, it was fun, it has great acting, great characters, great scenery, great special effects and a fun story. My daughter loved it as well. We both now want to read the books (we have all three, sitting on the shelf right next to the Harry Potter series, still unread by anyone in the household, but that is soon to change).
Of course, the story is a typical fantasy story – it has all the elements such a story has to have. There is the main protagonist who is an unlikely hero, too young and inexperienced for the job, yet nobody else can do. Events thrust the protagonist into the role of the hero. This involves a journey. An older, wiser character serves as a teacher. There is a funny, yet also wise sidekick. The enemy is a jealous authoritarian (surrounded by a slimy posse of thugs) who wants to rule the world. An object is lost and needs to be retrieved. The hero finds help and shelter from a group at the edge of society that cherishes freedom. The journey is perilous, and each dangerous event on the road teaches the hero something new and adds crust and courage to the character (i.e., the character is built). Unexpected family ties are discovered (“I Am Your Father, Luke!”). The crescendo of events leads to the final battle between Good and Evil in which Good triumphs and the hero, irreversibly changed, rides off into the sunset.
So yes, all the archetypes are in the movie. And so they are in every adventure, fantasy, coming-of-age story in history. From Illiad to Winnie-the-Pooh and Alice in Wonderland to James Bond. From 1984 and Fahrenheit 451 to Brave New World. From Hobbit and The Lord Of The Rings to Star Wars and Harry Potter. And so they are in the Golden Compass as well. Does it make the movie bad? Of course not – there is a reason why those elements are always in the story – they work! They appeal to something in all of us, make us identify with the hero and makes the adventure exciting!
So, what is special about Golden Compass? It’s sex. Everything in the movie has an interesting sexual or gender connotation. The hero is a heroine – a smart and brave girl. And, although there are many, many characters in the movie, very few are female. The society is entirely patriarchal. Thus, it is not just the age and the spunk, but also the gender of the heroine that rubs many other characters wrong (on both sides of the Good/Evil divide).
The place-time looks Victorian – I actually recognized the scenes filmed at Queens College and the Radcliffe Square in Oxford. And the society is Victorian as well. The school where Lyra goes to employs only men. The students, apart from her, are all men. White men. The only other female character at the college is the maid.
The Gyptians, while Billie’s mother appears to be a prominent member of the group, are still led by a group of old bearded men – she does not sit at their table when they make decisions.
With the polar bears it is hard to tell who is male or female, but there is no question that the King has to be male.
And of course, the Magisterium is led by a bunch of ugly, old, nasty, white guys who are the prime target audience for the Viagra commercials, if they only had anyone to use the blue pill with. Their sexual frustration, combined with the fear of death, turns them into power-hungry control freaks. If they can’t get it, nobody will! Thus, nobody, especially children, shall even know about sex, …er, Dust. Familiar?
In this world, every person has a daemon. Daemon is an animal and it is the place where the person’s soul resides. It is also a representation of the person’s sexuality. In kids, deamons are innocent and cute and change shape and form (aka species) all the time. At puberty, the species gets fixed. The soldiers have wolves. The farmers’ souls are horses. The servants’ daemons are dogs – higher in hierarchy, bigger the dogs, with the top servants walking around with Great Danes. And what are the daemons of the top leaders of the Magisterium? All are Great Cats. Now, why do you think these middle-aged guys are walking around with black panthers and snow leopards? Of course, for the same reason that their modern counterparts drive Jaguars to the grocery store.
And the very top dog, the leader of the cult? His daemon is a snake. Yes, really – a snake. The guy is constantly holding and playing with his python!
The king of the bears, the guy who likes to play with the dolls, is stupid enough to fall for the trick because the sweet-talking was delivered by a pretty girl who knows how to stroke his masculine insecurity.
The other bear, the good guy, also has some issues – he is a loner, a drunk, and a warrior. And as macho as can be. “Are you sure you want to ride me?” he asks, not being able to believe his good luck!
The other major female character, the ice-cold Mrs. Coulter – the brilliant stroke of lucky coincidence in naming, useful at pointing out to the dense what her role in the society is – is between the rock and a hard place. While the leaders of the Magisterium, all men, can sit around with stern faces, fluffing each others’ self-importance, Mrs. Coulter, being a woman, is supposed to actually do the work. She is doing the cleaning of the house. Being a woman, she is judged by her performance. Being a woman, she is dispensable if she screws up or becomes too uppity for their taste. They lust after her, and they hate her because they cannot have her. So, they own her and play with her destiny. And she, an independent spirit when younger, decided to play within the system, by their rules, choosing to have some power and temporary safety within their hierarchy in return for obedience. And she does it with a vengeance. If they are nasty, she has to be ten times as nasty just to be tolerated in their society.
Her project, an experimental splitting between kids and daemons, is a form of castration. Which she does with gusto. Except in one instance when her own offspring is to be rendered infertile. Her genetic immortality is more important to her than anything else in that moment of weakness.
So, is this movie anti-religious? Yes and no. It is primarily anti-authoritarian, so, as much as all organized religion is authoritarian, it is anti-religion. I do not know how the books are, but the movie does not mention God or even mention even a little bit of their beliefs and theology. We do not see anything from their sacred texts, do not hear the liturgy or see the ceremony. All we see is the social organization of the Magisterium which is decidedly authoritarian and bigoted, and on the other side, the Good side, the people are free-thinking and all-inclusive. The wiches, the bears, the Gyptians (who look like sea-faring Gypsies, the most despised and oppressed and simultaneously most romanticized nation in the world – for their love of freedom), the funny guy with a Texas accent – they never eye each other with suspicion for a split-second. Tolerance is in their blood.
But an authoritarian, hierarchical organization need not be limited to religious organizations. Political organizations, and others, can also be organized in the same way, motivated by greed, fear and sexual repression. Just because the leaders of the Magisterium wear funny robes, does not mean that the movie attacks priesthood in just religious organizations. Other, secular organizations also have their priests and uniforms. And of course the leaders of such organizations will want to headquarter their operations in as big and phallic buildings as possible, thus the cathedrals shapes in the movie. Again, the brilliant coincidence of the name of the second major female character….
And just because the audience is expected to want a “big one” as well, this little questionnaire produces, in about 90% of the trials, a Big Cat:

New on…. Open Access and Science 2.0

Subscription-supported journals are like the qwerty keyboard:

Are there solutions? One reason for optimism is that changing how we pay the costs of disseminating research is not an all-or-nothing change like switching from qwerty to Dvorak keyboards. Some new open-access journals are very prestigious. Granting agencies are giving strong ‘in-principle’ support to open access publishing, and my last grant proposal’s budget included a hefty amount for open-access publication charges. And libraries are looking for ways to escape the burden of subscription charges.

This is an interesting idea: an Open Access journal for brief notes and updates, i.e., parts of papers.
Is the End of the Print Journal Near?: New ARL Report Examines This Issue
Related to the three posts above: The Scientific Paper: past, present and probable future
Open Access and Accessibility for the Print Disabled. Of course. Open for Everyone!
Sharing, Privacy and Trust in a Networked World “on the potential roles of social networks for libraries”.
At this lab, everyone is required to maintain a science blog, and response: Why take the risk of writing a research blog? Read the comments on both posts as well.
The Ethics of Being an Open Access Publisher
WHO embargoes health information
Listen to Peter Murray-Rast’s talk at Berlin5 on Open Access.
Listen to the recording of Jean-Claude Bradley’s talk on Open Notebook Science.
Sequence the genomes of microbes or yourself, then plug the genomes into the Interactive Tree of Life.
Nurturing your talent in academia – some good ideas to think about.
CC, Open Access, and moral rights and Intellectual Property Rights: Wrong for Developing Countries?.
Re-writing for Proseminar:

It’s time to share another round of student writing! I asked students in the Proseminar course at USU (in which all faculty take three week turns introducing students to their research interests) to put together a paper about issues related to open education. The twist (there always is one) is that they were to write as little of the paper as possible. You see, wholesale plagiarism is discouraged, but weaving together a coherent piece from ten or fifteen different extant sources is tough and an excellent chance to get some first hand experience with reuse. =) Here are links and some summaries to these re-writing exercises, in which students assembled papers from pre-existing pieces:

Behold! The New Anti-Open Access FUD
Both this article and this article completely forget that scientists at universities are also academics and also bloggers (just look around scienceblogs.com for a start)!!! Why such focus on the humanities blogs in the first place? Where did that come from?
Dancing with words:

There is a great attraction to publishers in finding ways to describe Restricted Access as open. Carried to its logical conclusion, all publications thus become Open Access. Some are Delayed-For-A-Bit Open Access, others are Quite-A-Lot-Delayed Open Access, some are Very-Delayed Open Access and the rest – where the publisher never intends to make them freely available at all – are simply Permanently-Delayed Open Access. You see, what is there to complain about?

Open Science project on domain family expansion
Bursty work. Sort of… how science works, too. Not detectable from publications, though.
Corie Lok: Bringing science out of the dark ages
John Wilbanks: No tenure for Technorati: Science and the Social Web and Seeding the Social Web for Science
Is knowledge ‘property’?

Waistland…

..that is adolescence. And the research on what adolescents find attractive. For a few years. Until they gain the gift of speech and hearing, look up, and find beauty in the mind. Unfortunately, some never do.

Group eating tonight?

Group eating – how to carve a turkey.
Group eating – pros and cons of pack-hunting.
Group eating: not just vertebrates.
Group eating: calculate your inclusive fitness.

Peer-To-Patent

This is such a cool and novel idea – to let the public have a say in what gets patented and what not!
Check out the Peer-To-Patent homepage, download and read this paper by Beth Noveck (another SciFoo camper) which explains the process and sign up to participate.

For my European Readers

Not that it’s a good thing….
daysavings.jpg

Which Single Intervention Would Do the Most to Improve the Health of Those Living on Less Than $1 Per Day?

Since I was gone to two meetings and nobody else can walk the dog as regularly as I can, the dog spent the week at Grandma’s in Raleigh. Today I went to pick her up (the dog, that is) which placed me in the car at precisely the time of NPR’s Talk of the Nation Science Friday (OK, I intentionally timed it that way). And lo and behold, there was Gavin Yamey on the radio! Hey, I thought, I know this guy! We had lunch together and we exchange at least a dozen e-mails every week.
Gavin is editor at PLoS Medicine and, as part of the Global Theme Issue on Poverty and Human Development, he interviewed 30 experts on poverty (from economists like Jeffrey Sacks, through biomedical researchers focusing on the diseases of the poor, via medical staff working in the trenches, to the greatest experts on the topic – the poor themselves) and asked them the same question (the one in the title of this post). The answers are collected here.
You can hear the NPR interview here. Twice you can hear a faint jingle in the background. Apparently, a friend of his tried to text Gavin to tell him he was on Science Friday – as if Gavin was not acutely aware of the fact at the time! Talk of the Nation is a call-in show, thus it goes live. It is not pre-recorded. Please do not call your friends when they are On Air!
Gavin also gave a similar interview for Voice of America (find transcript through that link). I think he did marvelously.
The main points of the survey:
1) Doing something about poverty is not expensive or high-tech.
2) No single intervention is sufficient – a number of things have to happen simultaneously.
3) The rich countries reneged on their promise from the past to devote a certain percentage of their GDP to the eradication of poverty.
4) Getting the rich countries to do what they promised would go a long way.
One of the things Ira Flatow tried to do during the interview was to paint the picture as “haves versus have-nots”. I think Gavin did a nice job of deflecting this notion. The idea that the word “versus” should be between the words “haves” and “have-nots” is outdated and dangerous. The thinking that this is a zero-sum game in which the two “sides” compete, and if one side “wins” the other one “loses” is devious and wrong. The two groups are interconnected and interdependent. Either both win or both lose, and it is the haves who have the power to decide which outcome they prefer.

Global Theme Issue on Poverty and Human Development

Global Theme Issue on Poverty and Human Development (which I mentioned a few days ago here) was a great success. You can see all the articles associated with it here.
PLoS has collected all the poverty-related articles from its Journals on this nifty collections page.
A PLoS Medicine article – Food Insufficiency Is Associated with High-Risk Sexual Behavior among Women in Botswana and Swaziland – was one of the few that were highlighted at the event at NIH. Gavin has the details. Nick Anthis gives his angle.

Facebook, after weeks of pressure, still bans breastfeeding photos!

I thought the LiveJournal debacle taught them a lesson. I guess not. Melissa posted about this a couple of weeks ago, and Tara did it today again because the issue has not been resolved yet. So did PZ Myers (Janet Stemwedel and Dr. Joan Bushwell also chime in). Facebook is deleting pictures of breastfeeding and banning users who post them. Now that Facebook is not just for college crowd, there are more and more moms and dads on the network, proudly showing off their offspring to the world. Including offspring in the moments of feeding bliss.
But, you know that in this country there are a lot of dirty old men who find that scene somehow sexual (what kind of sick upbringing results in such sexual perversion, I wonder?), including, apparently, someone in the upper echelons of Facebook. Join the fast-growing Facebook group and send them a message. Blog about this as well. Force them to reverse this medieval decision.

A kick-ass Conference: Autonomy, Singularity, Creativity

Unfortunately, due to the Murphy’s Law of conference dates, I will have to miss this fantastic meeting, because I will at the time be at another fantastic meeting, but if you can come, please do – registration will be open online in a few days.

Autonomy, Singularity, Creativity

The conference theme is about bringing scientists and humanities scholars to talk about ways that science is changing human life.

November 8th, 9th, and 10th, the National Humanities Center will host the second ASC conference.

And the program features a Who’s Who list:

Thursday, November 8th
Frans de Waal
Martha Nussbaum
Friday, November 9th
Dan Batson
Margaret Boden
Joseph Carroll
Frans de Waal
Evelyn Fox Keller
David Krakauer
William Lycan
Martha Nussbaum
Steven Pinker
Paul Rabinow
Margery Safir
Robert Sapolsky
Saturday, November 10th
Terrence Deacon
Daniel Dennett
Alex Rosenberg
Mark Turner

Of those, I have seen Sapolsky, Fox Keller and Deacon speak before, and I know Alex Rosenberg, and for each one of them alone, it is worth showing up!

Danica McKellar exclusive for Scienceblogs

Tara of Aetiology, after reviewing Danica McKellar’s book “Math Doesn’t Suck”, posted an exclusive blog interview with Danica, which you can (and should) read here.

Facebook News and (my) Views

Let’s start with some Essential Facebook Readings of the day:
The Facebook Juggernaut…bitch!
Where are Facebook’s Early Adopters Going?
Hmmm, Facebook: a new kind of press release
All your widgets are belong to Facebook
Why We’re Like a Million Monkeys on Treadmills
Facebook: the new data black hole
What would get me (and others) to shut up about Facebook?
Why I Dropped Scoble and Seceded from the Hunt for Newer Shinier Things
My predictions for the near future, and I’ll explain them below:
1) In a Clash Of Titans, Google turns iGoogle into something better than Facebook. Facebook is crushed into oblivion.
2) In a Clash Of Titans, Facebook adds everything that is currently still missing in a frenzied flurry of activity and becomes the ‘It’ thing. Google is crushed into oblivion.
3) Google buys Facebook for a gazillion dollars and incorporates it into its arsenal.
4) Facebook resists sale now and, two years later, buy Google for a gazillion dollars and incorporates it into its arsenal.
5) I am totally wrong.
Why am I making such outrageous statements?
Because, most of the people pontificating on Facebook are techies. They love to try new things – the New Shiny Objects. They are, thus, a tiny minority. 99.9% of the people do not operate that way. They want to have One Thing.
This is a time of frantic experimentation, with apparently a new communication gizmo or ‘killer app’ appearing every day. It’s confusing. It’s too much. In a Darwinian struggle, all of those will die and one most liked by the general public will win. It may not be the best one (remember – VHS beat out Betamax), but it will be the one that most people are most comfortable with. Both Google and Facebook are now getting too close to that ideal to allow any newcomer to threaten them. They are the VHS and Betamax of the Web. Either they will fuse (in a friendly or unfriendly way), or one will beat the other. This world is too small for both of them.
What do most people want? What is that One Thing?
This means that anyone, anytime, anywhere can get on any computer, or game console, or pick up a cell phone and, with a single ID and password, access one’s own homepage. That homepage will look either like iGoogle or like Facebook homepage. The default will be just fine, so your Web-innocent sister-in-law will find it useful and easy to use, but it will be very easy to modify to meet everyone’s own needs and wants.
And there, all in one place, is everything you need and want: your Gmail, hotmail, yahoo mail, aol mail, AIM, local time, local weather, latest news from CNN, BBC, NPR and NYT, the cat photo of the day, your twitter, your Wall, a feed that shows what your friends are up to, your Skype or phone, portal to your island on Second Life, your blog, an RSS feed for news, an RSS feed for your favourite blogs, your RSS feed for latest Open Acces scientific papers with your keywords in them, your daily sudoku, your calendar and To Do list, your photo album, your podcast collection, your video collection, your music collection, your book library list, your Google Search, Google Blogsearch, Google Scholar, Google News, …. and all of that in one place, with a single ID and a single password, completely mobile.
Everything in one place – this is something that kids and grandmothers of techies are really looking for, and now techies themselves need to realize this simple little fact. Sooner or later, there will be no more New Shiny Objects to chase, as there will be only One Thing that everyone in the world is using. Like a phone. Or TV. Ubiquitous. Simple. Standardized. Foolproof.
And Vernor Vinge will be proven right once again.

Exclusive: Interview with Senator John Edwards on Science-Related Topics

I had a great pleasure recently to be able to interview Senator – and now Democratic Presidential candidate – John Edwards for my blog. The interview was conducted by e-mail last week.
As I am at work and unable to moderate comments, the comment section is closed on this post, but will be open on the previous post (here) where I hope you will remain civil and stay on topic. You are also welcome to comment on this interview at several other places (e.g,. DailyKos, MyDD, TPMCafe, Science And Politics, Liberal Coalition, the Edwards campaign blog as well as, hopefully, your own blogs).
I cannot answer any additional questions for Senator Edwards, of course, but there are likely to be other opportunities in the future where your questions can be answered so feel free to post them in the comments thread on the other post and I’ll make sure he gets them. The interview is under the fold:

Continue reading

This is something you can help with

TR Gregory of Genomicron blog is trying to help his parents as they sell their house and move to Zambia to do good work there, working with the Livingstone Performing Arts Foundation to try to rebuild the old Livingstone Theater.:

The Livingstone Performing Arts Foundation (LiPAF) mission is to create and perform traditional and original works of music, song and dance which reflect the history, culture, languages and ethnic background of Zambia. Operating as a not for profit organization, LiPAF will enrich the community by providing opportunities for employment, sponsorship of a variety of needy programs and services, and educational programs on topics related to the human condition.

Look around the Foundation site and donate if you can.

Why People Write?

I don’t know, but Grrrl and Archy tried to answer that question…

World 2.0 at Rainbows End

Books: “Rainbows End” by Vernor Vinge.
It’s 2025 – What happened to science, politics and journalism? Well, you know I’d be intrigued. After all, a person whose taste in science fiction I trust (my brother) told me to read this and particularly to read it just before my interview with PLoS. So, of course I did (I know, it’s been two months, I am slow, but I get there in the end).
‘Rainbows End’ is a novel-length expansion of the short story “Fast Times at Fairmont High” which he finished in August 2001 and first published in “The Collected Stories of Vernor Vinge“. The novel was written in 2005 (published in 2006) and the book happens in 2025, so it is a “near-future SF”, always more difficult to write than another episode of Star Trek.
Checking (after I have read the book) the reviews on Amazon.com, I was really taken aback and it made me think about science fiction, what it is and what people expect from it. So, what follows is simultaneously a book review and my own thoughts about the genre.

Continue reading

Sicko

Early reviews of the movie are coming out. Definitely read Ezra Klein’s take on it. And Amanda Marcotte’s. Also Mark Hoofnagle. And why Rob does not want to see it.
Perhaps it is my upbringing, but the fact that one has to pay for medical treatment (and/or pay health insurance) was the second most appallingly surprising thing to me when I arrived in the USA (the sincere religiosity of so many natives was the first). After 16 years here, I still cannot really wrap my mind around it. The notion that anyone but doctors, nurses and patients can have a say in medical treatment, or that anyone should make a profit out of people’s sickness is, to my mind, so atrocious, right up there with the notion of slavery. Both are extreme examples of trampling over most basic human rights.
I will go and see the movie as soon as I can.

Conservatives, Animals and Cruelty

What Archy says…
Related

Social Networks, danah boyd, and Class, Redux

Apophenia, danah boyd’s blog is one of the first blogs I ever read and have been reading more-or-less continuously over the past 3-4 years (since she took a class on framing with George Lakoff and blogged about it).
She is probably the most thoughtful analyst of online behavior. There are thousands who can write about technology and “killer apps”, but she understand better than anyone the users’ point of view: what works and what not and why.
Her ethnographic/sociological/anthropological/psychological approach to the study of the Web is, to me, much more insightful than any technology reviews written from the point of view of techno-geeks who actually write those “killer apps” for each other. You should check out some of her best work here.
The other day, danah wrote an essay on Class distinctions between high-school users of MySpace and Facebook (Note: high-school users, not everyone). Although it was just am impressionistic rough draft of a blog post hoping to become a rough draft of a paper, I found it insightful enough to already link to it twice – first to put it together with another relevant class-related post elsewhere, and second, to think about what kind of social networking platform would appeal to scientists.
Apparently, the article got a life of its own. It was linked and grossly misinterpreted by everyone from BBC to Metafilter and back. While she was traveling and offline, her associated blog post received more than 170 comments, some useful and enlightening, actually helping her with her project and her thinking, but many downright nasty, left by Metafilter folks who, of course, never read anything longer than two sentences and go with the “feel” for what the article is about gained from the misleading title of the Metafilter link without ever reading the actual article. They wanted to be offended in order to be able to lash out at someone yesterday, so they targeted danah as an appropriate target.
Of course, danah was stunned by the turn of events. BBC stated that this was a scientific study. Can you imagine one of your blog posts getting cited in the media as a “scientific study” although you were just thinking out loud late at night?
The chatter on smarter blogs is also quite interesting. Some bloggers (e.g., Scalzi, Eric Rice and Travis Hime) commented on the topic of the article itself. Yes, if you are offended by the aesthetics of MySpace, that actually tells something about you, who you are, where you are coming from and where you are going to in your life, and who your parents are. Your aesthetic sensibility arises from your, gulp, class. So does mine (yes, I also hate the MySpace bling, which tells you something about my upbringing).
Chad comments three times (one, two, three) and Ezra notes that class is not so much about money, but about “potential for education”. In other words, it is not how rich your parents are, or what education you have, or how much money you are making now, but where you can easily go to get more education if you wanted to (and other people cannot). Also, you need to check this interactive graphic about Class in the USA (which is different from class in the UK).
Ethan Zuckerman gives a summary of danah’s work to date as well as a talk she recently gave on the class aspects of social networks’ use by highschoolers. MySpace is scary to parents, while Facebook is not. Why not? There, I see the shortening of the leash effect. One day, when we are all wearing our online-access devices on our bodies, the leash will get longer again, but it will be electronic (which may be worse).
Scoble and Cornelius Puschmann look at the phenomenon of the article, i.e., the response to the article in the media and online, especially the misunderstandings and the nasty comments.
Cornelius rightly points out that her article was not actually on her blog, but on a site she uses for such works-in-progress, which, in turn, is close to her site where she posts finished articles. Thus, tens of thousands of people (including someone at BBC who should have known better) who have not heard of her until yesterday also made assumptions about the article due to its location, the name (“blog essay”) and the anti-theft citation note on the top. Fair. Very interesting to me, of course, is the fact that a blog post was assumed by the media, as well as many supposedly web-savvy people, to be a scientific paper. What are the limits? What are the tell-tale signs that something is a scientific paper and not a blog post? Is a “blog essay” in a fuzzy territory between the two forms of communicating science? Is it going to become more of a norm? Should it?

Class

Online and Offline. Obligatory Readings of the Day.

The Adult Film Industry: Time to Regulate?

For medical reasons, if nothing else.

The Power of Name

red_rose2.jpgWhat’s in a name? It’s just a word, a tag we use to talk about people so everyone knows wo we are talking about, isn’t it? Or at least that is how it should be, don’t you think?
But it is not, as anthropologists (and now psychologists as well) have been telling us for a long time. There is a reason why names run in families (with the addition of Jr., II, III, …). There is a reason why there is a big market for Baby Names books. Names have subtle power over people.
Now, Sheril discusses a recent study from the University of Florida about the subtle effect of female names on their prospects in science and math.
As a kid, I never thought of this. You meet people and learn their names and never think of names as being weird, or macho or feminine or whatever. This only starts happening as you are growing up and accumulating your own life’s name-list. And your name-list will be deeply affected by people you personally know. It took me a while to shed the notion that every Sofia is superficial and shallow because the first Sofia I have ever known (a girl I sat with in 2nd grade) was such a person.
I was most struck with the entire notion of the importance of names once we started picking names for our own babies. And those were names in Engish language. For my wife, the names were colored mainly by her own childhood experiences. For me, the first encounters with most of those names were in movies, TV shows and books. We disagreed on almost every name as to what it denotes!
What bothers me most about the study (and Sheril touches on that somewhat) is the definition of ‘feminine’. What is it? Who’s asking? Does ‘feminine’ mean pale, thin, silent wallflower? Or chick with a nice sat of T&As?
And this is where, I think, the study reveals not so much sexist thinking as classist! The names that are considered “soft” are also names considered to be “aristocratic”, names you find in the lineage of the British Monarchy, for instance. The “hard” names are considered to be more masculine because they are also considered to be more proletarian – names of people you can encounter actually doing hard work.
It has already been documented in the past how names that obviously belong to African American women are a handicap in getting a job or getting accepted at a University (refs, anyone?). As for the names that are not currently popular – if you know someone of that name, it is probably an older lady, who may behave in an old-fashioned way (from your perspective), so you get your prejudices from that.
Anyway, as you are growing up, it is not the other kids that judge you by your name (or even by your looks), it is the adults. And that can certainly influence your self-esteem and your choice of career. So, I am not surprised by the finding of the study, as much as concerned as to how to counter it in practice.
Update: I wrote the above in a 15-minute rush. May come back later to add some more in the comments. Here is the original Observer article (does anyone have an actual published paper of this?)
Also see good discussions on Thus Spake Zuska, Omni Brain, I am … unhindered by talent, Gene Expression Classic, Joanne Jacobs and Pharyngula.
Update: More interesting takes on The Island of Doubt, The Scientific Indian and Adventures in Ethics and Science.

Blip – creative arts, science and technology

What is it?:

Blip is a forum for artists, scientists and members of the public interested in new forms of art that explore generative and procedural processes, interaction, emergence and artificial life. We are based in Brighton, UK, and in the last 4 years we have organized presentations, exhibitions, gigs and three Big Blip festivals. To facilitate access, we primarily organize events in bars, clubs and other public venues in the centre of the city.

I have not been in Brighton since 1980 and I have not heard of Big Blip festivals until last night. Can someone tell me more? It sounds really interesting.

The Headline of the Week

“Fine in practice, but how does it work in theory?”

This headline (in a French paper, of course), prompted Sally Green to pen a fine, fine post – an Obligatory Reading of the Day – about class, education, the psychology of class, the difference between academia and the real world, the difference between theory and practice, and the difference between the people who fight for the equality of opportunity and the people who oppose it (and their rhetoric).

More than just Resistance to Science

In the May 18th issue of Science there is a revew paper by Paul Bloom and Deena Skolnick Weisberg. An expanded version of it also appeared recently in Edge and many science bloggers are discussing it these days.
Enrique has the best one-sentence summary of the article:

The main source of resistance to scientific ideas concerns what children know prior to their exposure to science.

The article divides that “what children know prior to their exposure to science” into two categories: the intuitive grasp of the world (i.e., conclusions they come up with on their own) and the learned understanding of the world (i.e., conclusions they absorb from the adults around them):

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Obligatory Readings of the Day – the Ken Hamm and Beyond edition

First, as I reported earlier, Archy persuaded PZ Myers to host a one-time carnival about the opening of the Creation Museum – and here is the carnival – a lot of good stuff to read.
I especially liked the only (so far) on-the-scene report by Martha Heil.
I also tend to prefer posts that try to take in a Big Picture and place stuff in broader historical and/or geographical context, thus, I really liked contributions by Laelaps and Greg Laden. They are optimistic, though. The view from outside, from Europe, can be much more pessimistic.
Also, some of the comments on this post remind me of my early internet days on various Balkans Usenet groups. Apparently, the tone and quality have not changed much since the early 1990s! I thought that brotherhood and unity were back in vogue again, as evidenced by the results of the Eurovision contest. I only made a quick remark in that direction, but several Euroblogs wrote deeper sociological analyses of the deeper meaning of the Eurovision results and what they portend for Europe’s future. See, for instance, this post and peruse a good linkfest collected by Eric.

Proper behavior in a coffee-shop

Before I start telecommuting, I need to learn some basic rules of behavior

Carnival of the Liberals #39

Well, it’s been a while…. since I hosted the CotL #3 about a year and a half ago. It’s ripe time to do it again. Not that it was ever easy to choose ten best written and most creative posts out of dozens of great entries! I spent the last few days agonizing and wishing I could include 20 or 30 or 40…but rules are rules, so here it goes, the brand new Carnival of the Liberals:
The Ridger of The Greenbelt digs for deeper causes in Not slavery – abolition:

Upsetting tyrants is noble, isn’t it?

Charles H. Green knows that Trust Matters and right now you should trust me that his post is well worth your time to read: Does Business Squeeze the Poor?:

Their arguments have the sound of 18th century English political theorists writing about natural law.

(Th)read carefully when Hell’s handmaiden goes subversively satirical before turning deadly serious: Guns and killin? And knives and garden tools, cars, rat poison?

Even good, well adjusted, happy people can be volatile sometimes.

Dave of Daveawayfromhome has a nine-point plan for Iraq. You may not agree with each point, but it will surely make you think (out of the box): My baby’s nation wont return my calls, redux:

The Iraqis are not a bunch of children.

GreenSmile of The Executioners Thong has a radical idea: Strangers in a strange land:

Only adults should ever study such dangerous stuff.

Faith of the gorgeous That is so Queer… blog wrote a post in two parts, one going in, the other pulling out (yes, you have to learn in slow, easy steps): Logic…or, ‘Hello? Is this thing on?’ and Oh no they didn’t:

Essentially it’s about the big abstinence pull-out…

Zeno is almost Halfway There, or, actually was 100% there in 1980 when the story takes place: Farewell to Falwell:

He pulled all of our strings simultaneously, carrying the unwilling along with the perfervid true believers.

Romeo Vitelli of Providentia provides a lesson in history: Becoming Lili:

The resulting furor when this reached the media was all that could be expected.

Steppen Wolf is The skeptical alchemist and she shows how everything is interconnected in, well, every country in the world. Perhaps a look at Italy can help jumpstart some inquiries closer to home, wherever that may be: Map of power in the Country of Jokes:

No, it is not going to be cheesy: it is going to be scary.

Now we can finally understand the root causes of all of Jon Swift’s problems: My Mother Is a Terrible Person:

Thank goodness my father made an honest woman out of her and saved me from being a bastard.

Everything you wanted to know about the Carnival of the Liberals you can find on its homepage. The next host will be the Grand Champion of the Carnival, Dr.Biobrain, so start sending your entries today using this easy submission form.

If the (description of the) Beginning was wrong, so is the End

A must-read by Sara Robinson. You can use it to understand the persistence of Creationism. Or the lack of Internal Locus of Moral Authority in people belonging to Moral Majority.

The Work-Place, or, Catching a Catfish Online

I will be offline for a couple of days so I will not be able to post at my usual frantic pace. Instead, I decided to write something that will take you a couple of days to read through: a very long, meandering post, full of personal anecdotes. But there is a common theme throughout and I hope you see where I’m going with it and what conclusions I want you to draw from it.
Pigeons, crows, rats and cockroaches
I was born and grew up in a big, dirty city and I am not going back (my ex-Yugoslav readers have probably already recognized the reference to the good old song Back to the Big, Dirty City by my namesake Bora Djordjevic of the uber-popular Fish Soup band). I spent the first 25 years of my life in Belgrade, population 2 million. No, I did not feel uncomfortable there. I knew every nook and cranny of the city. I walked around town most of the time, even if that meant two hours at a brisk pace in the middle of the night from the northernmost part of Zemun all the way home south of center.
And I still think that it is a great city – a wild mosaic of architecture from Roman and Ottoman times, through the Austro-Hungarian time, the pre-WWII Serbian and early Yugoslav kingdom era and the Tito communist period, to the Milosevic decade and Wes Clark’s enriched uranium. Steeped in history, yet not trying to live in it. Some cities try to keep looking the same the way they did a century or two ago when they were at the hight of their influence. Stratford-upon-Avon keeps trying to look as if Shakespeare is still living there. Not Belgrade. Far too confident in its 11 centuries of history to care about anything but youth and future. It can be dizzying walking around – there may be an old mosque from the times of Turkish occupation embedded into the remains of the Roman fortress, looking down the street of houses built in Austro-Hungarian style in one direction, in soc-realist style in another direction and overlooked by a huge green-glass modern hotel. There is great art and the ugliest kitch standing side-by-side, European hyper-intellectuals walking side-by-side with peasants, bookstores sinking under the weight of philosophy books and Gypsies collecting scrap metal – and all equally poor.
But it hurts one’s throat to arrive in Belgrade (at least it did in 1995, the last time I went to visit, when my father was still alive). Clean air is not the first priority when the retirees are waiting for months to get their pensions. That is why I escaped whenever I could – summers in our small weekend house at the base of the Mt.Avala just about 20 minutes south of Belgrade when I was a little kid, a couple of weeks at the Adriatic coast every summer when I was little before that became too expensive, teenage years spent on the Danube river in Eastern Serbia in the village my father grew up in, and many years, day after day, at the Belgrade racecourse and the surrounding woods.
~.~.~.~.~.~
Back in 1989 or so, the rats at the racecourse got really numerous and big. Ten-pounders, some of them, I bet. They were not afraid to walk around in the middle of the day. They chased, caught, killed and ate our barn cats. Our terriers were afraid to approach the feed-rooms. We forbade the kids from going to get horse feed. Even we adults banged on the doors before going in. But gradually, we moved all the grain into bins and barrells, plugged all holes, reinforced the walls, and kept the floors as clean as possible. There was just not enough food around any more to sustain such a huge population. As it always goes, after a boom, there is a bust. The rat population collapsed and dissappeared as suddenly as it initially appeared.
~.~.~.~.~.~
I grew up in a small appartment on the 7th floor. My school (K-12) was a walking distance from home. I took a bus to school anyway, being an owl and a late riser, but I had plenty of time to walk home after classes and stop by various food establishments, or parks, or the Natural History Museum, or the library, or stealing cherries and appricots from trees along the route…

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Happy Labor Day!

In a large proportion of the surface of our planet, people are not supposed to go to work today. Not here, though. Eh, the good old days back home when my parents would go off for a ten-day vacation on May Day and leave my brother and me to rule the house and host parties…

Curse Words

Last week’s Casual Friday study on Cognitive Daily tried to look at the way various curse words are used and perceived by their blog readers.
Today, the results are in and, though not surprising, they are quite interesting. The sample is probably skewed towards well-educated folks interested in cognitive science, as well as towards the US readers (or at least English-speaking readers), but they had a large enough sample this time to get significant differences between sexes, if not races.
Do you find “bitch” less offensive if you are a dog breeder? Or if you are a regular reader of Bitch, PhD blog?

TIME’s most influential people of the year

They are asking you to rate them here.
I have never heard of about half the people on the list – perhaps they are ‘influential’ in their small circles. Others are celebrities, and they may be influential in distracting people from things that matter. Some used to be influential in the past, or are influential abroad but not here. PZ suggests everyone gives Dawkins a 100%. Sure – the only scientist on the list (although they call him, gasp, an “evolutionist”!!!!).
Watch out – the stuff loads really slowly and it is too easy to give a 50% when your intention is to give a different rating. I have only voted for Elizabeth Edwards (who have since slipped from 14th to 34th place!) because she is the only one I know in person and the only one to have commented on my blog.

How many things are wrong with this study?

Here, have a go at it. Even better, if you can get the actual paper and dissect it on your blog, let me know so I can link to that. Have fun!
Good Behavior, Religiousness May Be Genetic:

A new study in Journal of Personality shows that selfless and social behavior is not purely a product of environment, specifically religious environment. After studying the behavior of adult twins, researchers found that, while altruistic behavior and religiousness tended to appear together, the correlation was due to both environmental and genetic factors.
According to study author Laura Koenig, the popular idea that religious individuals are more social and giving because of the behavioral mandates set for them is incorrect. “This study shows that religiousness occurs with these behaviors also because there are genes that predispose them to it.”
“There is, of course, no specific gene for religiousness, but individuals do have biological predispositions to behave in certain ways,” says Koenig. “The use of twins in the current study allowed for an investigation of the genetic and environmental influences on this type of behavior.”
This research is another example of the way that genes have an impact on behavior. “Society as a whole assumes that home environments have large impacts on behavior, but studies in behavior genetics are repeatedly showing that our behavior is also influenced by our genes,” says Koenig.

Framing Science – the Dialogue of the Deaf

Blog%20Against%20Theocracy.jpgMy SciBlings Chris Mooney and Matt Nisbet just published an article in ‘Science’ (which, considering its topic is, ironically, behind the subscription wall, but you can check the short press release) about “Framing Science”
Carl Zimmer, PZ Myers, Mike Dunford (also check the comments here), John Fleck, Larry Moran, Dietram Scheufele, Kristina Chew, Randy Olson, James Hrynyshyn, Paul Sunstone and Alan Boyle have, so far, responded and their responses (and the comment threads) are worth your time to read. Chris and Matt respond to some of them. Matt has more in-depth explanations here, here and here (pdf) that are worth reading before firing off a response to the whole debate.
This is not a simple topic, but I will try to organize my thoughts in some way….

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When Yes means No.

When I ask a guy for something, I may get Yes as an answer half the time and No half the time. Yes mostly means Yes and No means No. If the answer is “Let me think about it”, that means usually that within 24 hours or so I will get a definitve Yes or No answer.
If I ask a woman for something, I rarely ever get a No. I may get Yes half the time and “Let me think about it” the other half. And moreover, Yes need not necessarily mean Yes, and “Let me think about it” ALWAYS means No – as in: I never hear about it again from that person.
On the surface, that sounds like dishonesty and playing games, and sure is inconvenient not to know what the real answer is. But I am aware of the deeper psychological reasons for not being able to say No to anyone, as I was once like that (and learned through persistence and hard work not to be). It is a matter of politeness mixed with a dose of fear (of being ostracized or something).
And it is certainly much more ingrained in – or inculturated into – women than men. How? Check this post and the 85 comments in the thread under it.

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.

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.

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.

Feminism101

You know how on comment threads on blogposts about evolution you, sooner or later, get a commenter saying something that reveals complete lack of understanding of even the basics of evolutionary biology? It is usually accompanied by some creationist canard as well. What do you do? If you stop to explain the basics, the thread gets derailed. You REALLY want to discuss that latest study, not go back to basics over and over again.
So, instead of explaining the basics, you post a link to the appropriate page on the TalkOrigins FAQ or Index of Creationist Claims and move on with the discussion, hoping that the uninformed commenter will actually do the homework and follow the links.
But there is no such resource for discussions about equality, particularly gender equality. Or at least there WAS no such thing. There is now – see Feminism101 (via Pandagon and Feministe). Help build it by finding and linking relevant online articles and blog-posts that explain the basics or debunk myths and mysoginist talking points.
No need to have every comment thread derailed by Man’s Rights creeps any more. Whatever they say – just link to the relevant F101 post and send them there. Then continue discussing what YOU want to discuss instead of going to the basics over and over again.

Happy International Women’s Day

Growing up in Eastern Europe, there was no avoiding March 8. It was an official holiday, though still a workday (only in the USSR did people get a day off from school and work). It has also evolved over time into an incredibly kitchy holiday, a combined crass commercialized equivalent of Mother’s Day and Valentine’s Day, despised by feminist women for the hypocrisy of the essentially patriarchal society which used this day to put a woman on a pedestal for a day instead of barking orders to the kitchen for another bottle of beer.
See more history of the holiday on Wikipedia, the official 2007 ceebration site, and an American feminist perspective from Shakespeare’s Sister

Quote of the Day

And you don’t even have to believe in dinosaurs to share their fate.

From here. And the preceeding paragraph? Another great quote:

“You know how taking so long to end slavery is a shameful part of our history, and how long it took us to give the vote to women is a shameful part of our history? Well, I think in 20 years, we’re going to think that denying marriage to gays for so long is one of the great shames of our nation, too.” That’s from a teenager in Redneckville. She’s our future–and Donohue, LaBarbera, and company are just desperate dinosaurs.

The Reducible Complexity of John McCain

Evolution works according to a very small set of simple rules. If a) there is variation in a trait in a population and b) that variation is heritable and c) one variant is better adapted to the current local environment, then d) the best adapted trait will increase in the proportion within the population in the next generation. Once you understand this simple algorithm (perhaps, for fuller understanding, learn some basics of the ways genotype maps onto phenotype via development), everything about the living world is explainable without magic.
John McCain works according to a very small set of simple rules: “If the wind is blowing from the Right, blow your wind towards the Right, if it blows from the Left, blow your wind to the Left, if it comes from the Center, blow straight ahead.” Once you understand this simple algorithm, everything about John McCain is explainable without magic.
If you do not know the simple evolutionary algorithm, everything about Nature looks mysterious and you are likely to come up with ridiculous notions such as “irreducible complexity”. You become a creationist and join the Discovery Institute.
If you do not know the simple McCain algorithm, everything about him looks mysterious – why did he say one thing today and the oppsite yesterday? – and you come up with ridiculous notions such as “McCain the Maverick”. You become a lazy, incurious beltway journalist and join the CNN crew.
Also, have you seen McCain’s website? Jet black. Worthy of Loni Riftenschtal (sp?). But the “McCain wind theory”, as a true scientific theory, has predictive power. It predicts that, the day McCain wins the nomination (if he does), his website will turn red and sunny and lose the 1930s Germany feel to it.
So, there is no surprise that Discovery Institute is one of the sponsors of the McCain campaign stop in Seattle today.
And don’t expect the media to notice anything strange about it, either.

Wimp Factor

You know that I think that Wimp Factor is one of the most important yet least appreciated books about ideology and politics in recent years. So, I was really glad to see an excellent review of it by Amanda:

Regardless of you feelings about whether or not he’s got the right reasons for why anxious masculinity exists, his examination of the effects of it is right on the money.

How to build a smart, safe car

How to build a smart, safe carThis (from March 09, 2006) was a precursor to this

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Telephone is so last millennium….

Yup, like Amanda, Atrios and Ed, I hate the telephone.
That is why I don’t have the cell phone. That is why my landline phone has an answering machine.
If you call and the machine picks up and I actually want to talk to you at that particular moment, I’ll pick up. If not, leave a message and I’ll get back with you….by e-mail.
And if you use a phone with me, stick to the brief exchange of information. Business only. Chatting over the phone is reserved for my mother and my brother only.
I prefer to communicate on my own time, in my own way and do not like the tyranny of the phone ring.

On Edwards, Bloggers, and Religion

Ah, why do I have to be so busy on a news-filled day (no, not Anna Nicole Smith)? I barely saw the computer today. I’d get home, have about 5 minutes before I have to go out again and so on. NPR did not mention Edwards until 4pm or so (that I heard in the car), so when I first got home I only had time to open e-mail, scan about 50 new messages, home in to the one that had the news, open it, get the links and quickly post without more than a quick skim of the statements by Edwards and others, let alone any time to add commentary (except for what the title implied I felt at the time). And then there were comments I did not have time to respond to. And all the other blogospheric responses I was missing…Ah, well. The family is asleep so I’ll try to catch up now.

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Reality will bite you if you choose to ignore it

Alan Sokal (famous for attacking the Lefty postmodernist abuse of science in the 1990s) and Chris Mooney (famous for attacking the Republican War on Science in the 2000s) sat down and wrote an excellent article in LA Times that came out today:
Can Washington get smart about science?
The article gives a historical trajectory of the problem, how it moved from political Left to the Right and what the new Democratic Congress is doing and still can do to bring back the respect for science, or for that matter, the appreciation for reality (which, no matter what the Bushies wish, they cannot make out of thin air):

For, in the end, all of us — conservative or liberal, believer or atheist — must share the same real world. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria do not spare deniers of evolution, and global climate change will not spare any of us. As physicist Richard Feynman wrote in connection with the space shuttle Challenger disaster, “nature cannot be fooled.”
To avoid nature’s punishment, we must take steps now to restore reality-based government.

Much more eloquent and up-to-date than this related, but old rant of mine.

Teen Sex, ‘Hooking Up’, Gay Marriage, Femiphobia and Bush Victory Are All Interconnected

Teen Sex, 'Hooking Up', Gay Marriage, Femiphobia and Bush Victory Are All InterconnectedContinuing with the last week’s topic (originally posted on March 11, 2005 – click on the spider-clock icon to see the comments, including by Mark O’Connell – who I subsequently met and blogged about, on the original post)

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Greenwich time to remain Greenwich time

In light of my post earlier today about the discrepanices between ‘real time’ and ‘clock time’ (or ‘social time’), it is heartening that the Parliament in the U.K. wisely decided not to switch their clocks to the time the rest of Europe observes. If they did, they would be seriously out of whack. After all, at Zero Meridian in Greenwich (yup, I stood astride it, of course), midnight is really midnight – it is the middle of the time zone. Resetting it by one hour would put the Brits at the far Western edge of another time zone and they would always experience true midnight a long time (60-120 minutes!) after the clocks say it is midnight (the same goes for dawn, noon, dusk and any other time).
Now, if they (and us and everyone else) could only decide not to go through the twice-annual ritual of re-setting the official clocks by one hour (Spring forward, Fall back), that would save a lot of lives….