The Sense of Scale

Josh Wilson finds a new (to me, at least) metaphor that puts the geological time in perspective, and Carel discovers some cool models that place the astronomical size and space in perspective. Humbling and edifying. Good ideas for science teachers.

Circadian Rhythm of Alcohol Tolerance

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

Diurnal rhythm of alcohol metabolismThe original title of this post – “Diurnal rhythm of alcohol metabolism” – was more correct, but less catchy (from February 21, 2006).

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Blogrolling: K

It appears that the letter K is a niche that still has ample remaining space for new enterprenurial souls…

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SBC – NC’07

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Paul Gilster of Centauri Dreams blog, and the book of the same name, is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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EduBlogging of the week

The Carnival of Education: Week 95 is up on A History Teacher.
Carnival of Homeschooling #48 is up on The Common Room.

Blogrolling: J

Here’s another letter for you:

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The Truth is, as usual, a little bit more complicated

The story about National Science Teachers of America refusing the “Inconvenient Truth” DVDs is not as black & white as previously reported. Sandra Porter has a good run-down.

MedBlogging of the Week

Grand Rounds Vol. 3, No. 10, now up on Notes from Dr. RW

Bugs and Trees

Send your submissions for the Festival of the Trees by tomorrow.
Also, send your submissions for the Circus of the Spineless by December 4th.

Books: “On Becoming a Biologist” by John Janovy

Janovy%20cover.jpgI wish that, many many years ago when I was becoming a biologist, that I could have read this wonderful little book – On Becoming a Biologist by John Janovy! What a little gem!
On the surface, or by looking at the Table of Contents, this slim volume appears to be just yet another in a long line of books giving advice to people who are interested about joining the profession. And sure, it does contain important information about getting accepted into a program, choosing one’s project, teaching, research, publishing, getting funded, giving talks etc. But it is also much more than that. The entire volume is permeated by personal experience and sprinkled with little gems of wisdom. In the end, you realize that biology is not just a profession – it is what you love and, more impportantly who you are, how you define yourself and how you think about the world.
In other words, biology is not what you do but who you are. A biologist is primarily a naturalist, someone who looks at the world and sees the interconnectedness, someone whose primary preoccupations are not politics, economics, entertainment, fashion or money, but the way humans are related to every other living thing on the planet.
Thus, you can earn a living by being a lawyer, clerk or politician, and still call yourself a biologist – never being bored when out in nature, never too engrossed in the business of society to lose sight of the awe and beauty of nature, never too busy chasing money to forget that you and that cockroach you just squashed are distant relatives. It is a worldview more than a profession, being able to see the natural forest for he social trees.
Likewise, you can earn your living doing biology yet not be a biologist. Being good at using a particular technique or solving puzzles makes you a good technician, but without the sense of wonder, without noticing what others do not in nature, you are not really a biologist. If you are more interested in the properties of a protein than in what that protein does in an organism to make it be adapted to its environment, you are a chemist, not a biologist. There is nothing wrong with being a chemist, of course, but this book is about being a biologist. The focus of the biologist’s attention is always the organism. One can study complex ecosystems, or one can study details of molecular biology, but if the organism is not front and center, it is not biology.
A biologist, according to Janovy,

“has, by virtue of his or her interests, the obligation to continually attemp (1) an integration of parts into a whole, and (2) an explanation of the whole in which both the behavior of the whole, and the role of the part, are considered. This manner of thinking is, or at least should be, characteristic of one who considers the function of an organelle relative to the life of a cell, of a cell relative to the life of a tissue, and so forth up to and including the roles of wholeorganisms in the organization of an ecosystem. With this kind of perspective, an average citizen should be able to metaphorically place his or her time on Earth into a context that includes the entire planet and its evolutionary history. A biologist has an obligation to explain, and perhaps promote acceptance of, this metaphor.”

Thus, it is a duty of a biologist to be a public person, a vocal spokesman for the kind of thinking about the world in which the humans are not set apart and valued on their own, but only as one of many parts in a complex system of nature. Part of this loud voice, again according to Jacoby, is the duty of a biologist to strongly and vocally denounce anthropocentric points of view – from Creationism to anti-envrionmental activities – and replace them with a naturalistic worldview in which we play an important part, but are codependent with other organisms in space and time and cannot safely regard ourselves and our societies in isolation from Nature.
This book should be a required reading for every college freshman considering a major in biology. If you have a niece or nephew who appears to ba a “natural” naturalist, this book is a perfect gift for the upcoming holiday season.

Blog Experiment

Blog ExperimentIn the similar vein to this morning’s post (and the neccessary link within it) on the speed of meme-spreading, I tried to do this little experiment about a year ago (October 12, 2005) with no success – perhaps because I asked for more than just a link. Now that my audience is much bigger, let’s try again:
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There are estimated to be more than 20 55 million blogs in existence. Somebody somewhere knows the answer to my question. If every one of my readers (who also owns a blog) copies and pastes this post on their blogs, it should spread through the entire blogosphere over just a couple of days. Then, once somebody comes up with the answer to my question, the whole process repeats, with every blogger posting the answer. It should reach me in no less than a week. Let’s try to do this. My question is:
What is the first original use of the phrase: “Note to Self”?
Does it come from a movie, comic strip, TV show (“Police Squad” comes to mind)? If you know the answer, post it on your blog and encourage your readers to do the same. Is the blogosphere such a powerful means of light-speed exchange of information? Let’s prove that it is.

NewsTrust

NewsTrust is a news portal that rates the stories by the quality of the journalism, as assessed by readers.

Readers are asked to rate stories based on how fair, balanced, accurate, and important the stories are, along with other criteria. The system has been set up to try and limit gaming of the site and to promote a non-partisan balanced view of the underlying journalism.

Along with the major news-media, the new portal is also rating some of the biggest blogs.
You should register and make it a habit to rate the stories. Also, tell your friends (or blog-readers) to do the same. A good way to spread the news is to go and recommend this DailyKos diary so the thousands of Kossians see it and follow up on it.

Blog memes

Some things spread like wildfire across the blogs. But, can an artificial meme, designed specifically to measure the speed of its spreading, spread as fast? If we know its speed, can we know its position at the same time, and vice versa? You’ll know the answer (pretty soon) if you link to this from your blog.
Perhaps it would be more useful to track the already existing and popular memes, like Beautiful Bird Meme, Random Quotes Meme, Silly Blog Meme, Four Meme, Zero Meme, Dirty Thirty Meme, States Meme, Obscure-But-Good-Movies Meme, Four Jobs Meme, The Blogging Blog Meme, Browser Meme, Seven Times Seven Meme or many, different, book, memes and compare those that include tagging the recepients to those that are free-for-all, those that are general to all bloggers to those that are specific to one particular corner of the blogosphere, as well as compare these “intelligently designed” memes to those that arise spontaneously when someone posts important piece of news or a cool picture.
Moreover, something like the experiment Acephalous is planning to do has already been done and you can watch the Memetree.
Also, the Academic Blog Meme was tracked as well.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Aching Back? Sitting Up Straight Could Be The Culprit:

Researchers are using a new form of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to show that sitting in an upright position places unnecessary strain on your back, leading to potentially chronic pain problems if you spend long hours sitting.

Sleep Problems In Overweight Children Appear Fairly Common:

One-fourth of overweight children may have sleep problems that regular physical activity can largely resolve, researchers say.

Synchrotron Reveals How Neanderthal Teeth Grew:

Scientists from the United Kingdom, France and Italy have studied teeth from Neanderthals with X-rays from the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF). They found that the dental development of Neanderthals is very similar to modern humans. Their results are published in Nature this week.

Serengeti Patrols Cut Poaching Of Buffalo, Elephants, Rhinos:

A technique used since the 1930s to estimate the abundance of fish has shown for the first time that enforcement patrols are effective at reducing poaching of elephants, African buffaloes and black rhinos.

Humpback Whales Have Brain Cells Also Found In Humans :

A new study compared a humpback whale brain with brains from several other cetacean species and found the presence of a certain type of neuron cell that is also found in humans.

Predicting Impact Of Climate Change On Organisms: Latitude’s Not Enough:

According to a recent study, predicting the impact of climate change on organisms is more complicated than simply looking at species northern and southern range limits.

SBC – NC’07

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David Kirk is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Blogrolling: I

Is this useful to you?
It is useful to me, for sure, as my blogroll is in a bad need of updating. By doing this, I get to clean-up my Bloglines, update the feeds on blogs that have moved, delete dead blogs, revisit some old friends I have not read in a while, and add new blogs that you suggest in the comments.
But it it useful for you? Have you discovered, checking my blogrolling posts, any blogs new to you that you really liked and decided to bookmark/blogroll/subscribe for yourself?

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Why do Elephants Have Large Ears?

It’s been almost three months since Arunn, in the comments to this post, promised to write a post about the thermoregulatory function of big, flappy elephant ears. Finally, he’s gotten to it, and now you can go and read his post. A perfect entry for the next edition of Panta Rei, which needs your entries ASAP.

Medical Imaging of the Week

Radiology Grand Rounds – VI – now up on Spot Diagnosis

Circadian Rhythms in Human Mating

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

Circadian Rhythms in Human MatingA short-but-sweet study (March 18, 2006):

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My picks from ScienceDaily

Opposites Do Not Attract, Parrot Study Finds:

A study conducted at the University of California, Irvine, found that a female budgerigar prefers to mate with a male that sounds like her.

Dragonfly’s Metabolic Disease Provides Clues About Human Obesity:

Parasite-infected dragonflies suffer the same metabolic disorders that have led to an epidemic of obesity and type 2 diabetes in humans.

Wild Gorillas Carriers Of A SIV Virus Close To The AIDS Virus:

A recent article in Nature reports the discovery of gorillas living in the wild in Central Africa infected with an HIV-1 related virus, called SIVgor, genetically close to an HIV-1 variant called O found in humans

‘Nymph Of The Sea’ Reveals Remarkable Brood :

Geologists from the United Kingdom and the United States have made an unusual discovery from over 425 million years ago … hard boiled eggs! The scientists discovered the mother complete with her brood of some 20 eggs and 2 possible juveniles inside, together with other details of her soft parts.

SBC – NC’07

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Danita Russell of Random Ramblings is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Blogrolling: H

As always, check the list and see if anything is wrong or missing:

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NeuroBlogging of the week

The Synapse #12 is up on Dr. Deborah Serani’s blog

A vicious cycle of alcohol and insomnia

Recovering alcoholics with poor sleep perceptions will likely relapse:

“The usual perception of alcohol’s effects on sleep in nonalcoholics is that it helps sleep,” explained Deirdre A. Conroy, the corresponding author who conducted the research while a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan. “In truth, alcohol may help people fall asleep but it usually leads to poor quality sleep in the second half of the night and overall less deep sleep. As people drink more regularly across nights to fall asleep, they become tolerant to the sedating effects of alcohol and subsequently use more alcohol each night to help fall asleep. This escalation in drinking can lead to alcoholism.”

Pam’s House Blend has moved!

Pam has moved from here to here. You have to register to comment, but the process is easy. The new site is built on Soapblox and looks gorgeous. Oh, and you’ll be able to post your own diaries in the near future.
So, change your bookmarks, blogrolls and newsfeeds and enjoy your morning cup of Pam’s brew.

National Science Teachers of America Exxon

Laurie David, one of the producers of An Inconvenient Truth, wrote a piece for today’s Washington Post describing her efforts to make 50,000 DVD copies of that movie available to America’s science teachers through NSTA. They said no. And, more weirdly, they explained why.

Read the rest here. Horrifying. Go here to tell them what you think.

Where do people find information about evolution?

I am sure glad that others have started parsing the numbers of the new report on ‘The Internet as a Resource for News and Information about Science’.
Duane Smith takes a close look at a couple of tables in the report and concludes that, while relatively few people say they get their information on evolution directly from the Bible and Church, many do so indirectly, by beeing steeped in their comunities’ beliefs transmitted by family, friends and neighbors (as well as local and church-run media). Interesting take (and I agree with him on this). What have you found so far?

Godlessness of the week

Carnival of the Godless 54: Christmas Shopping Time! is now up on Hellbound Alleee

NC blogging of the week

Tar Heel Tavern #92 – Thanksgiving Edition – is up on Slowly She Turned

SBC – NC’07

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Robert Reddick is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Blogrolling: G

Let’s keep moving down the alphabet. Let me know what is missing from this list…

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Creatures of Accident

You know that I think that Wallace Arthur is one of the sharpest writers on evolution today and that his Biased Embryos and Evolution is one of the best books I’ve read recently on the topic. I just saw that he has a new book out, Creatures of Accident. Has anyone read it yet? Is it good? Just in case, I placed it on my amazon wish list, so, if you think it is worth my while, I can get it once I get hold of some cash.

Friday Weird Sex Blogging

As seen on Facebook (I could not find the originals anywhere online – if you do, please let me know so I can attribute it correctly):
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World Science

Pot may be good and bad, researchers propose:

The truth about marijuana might be more complex than either its opponents or its champions suggest, some scientists argue.

We’re more genetically diverse than thought:

Research has found that at least one in 10 human genes vary in the number of copies of certain DNA sequences.

A step toward quantum computers:

Physicists say they’ve taken a step toward making computers that work at blinding speeds thanks to the weird realities of quantum physics.

One cell makes almost any heart tissue, study finds:

New research could be a stride forward for therapy to rebuild hearts, but its use of embryonic cells may stir controversy.

Molecules may ‘anchor’ memories in brain:

Our brains nail down memories by using special proteins as anchors, a study suggests.

Extreme black hole pushes spin ‘limit’:

A black hole’s blindingly fast rotation could help explain some strange phenomena, physicists say.

Biophilia? Not what E.O.Wilson had in mind!

Love for animals, even the dead ones, can sometimes go too far, dontcha think?

The Intellectual Offspring of Milankovic is doing quite well, thank you

Srbija najbolja na Astronomskoj olimpijadi (my translation):

Serbia, whose most modern telescope was built at the beginning of the 20th century and was brought to Belgrade as part of WWI war reparations, won two gold and two bronze medals at the 11th World Astronomy Olympiad in Bombay earlier this month. Olympic winners from Serbia are students of the first [ninth] grade of the Mathematical Gymnasium in Belgrade: Luka Milicevic and Natasa Dragovic. Milicevic competed in the younger category as he is 15 years old, while Dragovic is only 14. On the Serbian team were also Aleksandar Vasiljkovic, also a first grade student of Mathematical Gymnasium, and Ivana Cvijovic, the second grade student – they got bronze medals.
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Luka Milicevic exlained that the competiiton cosisted of a theoretical part, solving problems that required the knowledge of Physics and mathematics, and a practical part that consisted of observations of the sky both with naked eye and through telescope, then using the observations to solve problems, e.g., calculating mass of a galaxy from its rotation rate.

International Astronomy Olympiad sees ‘starry’ contestants

The performance of students in the International Astronomy Olympiad (IAO) here was “par excellence”, reflected by the fact that the number of gold medals awarded to top performers had to be raised from 10 to 13 this year, an organising committee member said.
Five Indian students bagged gold medals, the highest by any country in the competition organised by the Euro-Asian Astronomical Society. The meet concluded here yesterday.
Normally, the IAO awards 10 gold, 20 silver and 30 bronze medals. But this time the judges demanded that the number of gold medals be increased to 13 due to the excellent performance by many students, Anand Ghaisas, member of IAO’s National Organising Committee, told reporters after the award ceremony.
That is how five Indian students won gold medals, he said. This was the fifth consecutive year that India topped the competition, which drew 120 contestants from 19 nations. South Korea won three gold medals followed by Serbia (two), Russia, Iran and Bulgaria (one each).
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This year’s IAO had several unique things. The students were given actual data of the Giant Meterwave Radio Telscope (GMRT) near Pune for analysis. “They got to handle real-time data in the practical round,” Ghaisas said.
In the observation rounds, the students were taken to GMRT and provided 15 optical telescopes in a field under darkness. Each student had to be there for a half-an-hour exam. “The weather was excellent and the observation test took place between 7.30 pm and 11 pm,” he said.

SBC – NC’07

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Rob Gluck of Ivory-bills Live is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Blogrolling: F

As always, let me know in the comments if I missed a good blog…

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Second Coming?

I admire actors who completely immerse themselves in the characters they play. But nobody has reached the hights of dedication as much as Keisha Castle-Hughes, a 16-year old actress playing Virgin Mary in an upcoming movie – she is pregnant!
Forget the money she’ll earn doing he movie – she can rake in millions if she starts a cult around the divinity of her child. I am just not sure if the conception was immaculate.
Full story: Unwed and pregnant, like Mary

Edublog Awards 2006

The third international Edublog Awards are now open for nominations.

Internet as a source of scientific information

Pew Internet and American Life Project just issued a new report: The Internet as a Resource for News and Information about Science (pdf). It states that:

Fully 87% of online users have at one time used the internet to carry out research on a scientific topic or concept and 40 million adults use the internet as their primary source of news and information about science.

The report is chockful of statistics of great importance to us science bloggers. For instance:

Each respondent to this survey received questions on one of three specific scientific topics: stem cell research, climate change, and origins of life on Earth. When asked what source they would use first if they needed to learn more about the topic, here is what they said:
67% of those receiving questions about stem cell research said they would turn to the internet first for information on this topic; 11% said the library.
59% of respondents receiving questions about climate change said they would turn to the internet first for information on this topic; 12% said the library.
42% of those answering questions about the origins of life on Earth said they would turn to the internet first for information on this topic; 19% said the library, and 11% said the Bible or church.

Our blogs are indexed with Google and other search engines and will show up on top of searches for scientific information, especially if it is related to recent science news, so these data are important to keep in mind:

87% of stem cell respondents who cited the internet as their first choice for finding out more about their topic said they would use a search engine.
93% of climate change respondents who cited the internet as their first choice for finding out more about their topic said they would use a search engine.
91% of origin of life respondents who cited the internet as their first choice for finding out more about their topic said they would use a search engine.

There is much, much more about the use of online resources, as well as attitudes of internet users toward science. David Warlick and his commenters also look at the data from an educational perspective.
I urge you to dig through the information and post your own thoughts on whatever set of numbers or conclusions you find curious or important.
Update: David Warlick has more.

Being Poor All The Way To The Bank

Being Poor All The Way To The BankOn poverty, personal, national and global, and why it makes sense not to have a bank account when you are poor (October 04, 2005). Espcially in light of recent news about the way big banks rip off people by depositing big checks first – placing accounts into the red – then depositing multiple small checks which otherwise would have cleared but now incur fees which, added over many customers, add up to billions in profit for the banks. This practice kills me every month. I pay the biggest things (rent) by MoneyOrder so I am not afraid of that bouncing, but I’d like to minimize the number of penalty fees I get hit with. Can anyone tell me more about the Harrington Bank since I want to leave Wachovia?

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SBC – NC’07

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Ed Cone is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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I Like M&Ms

I am still sleepy from all that tryptophan in turkey meat and the Evolution wine, so I don’t think I have the energy to write a big post now – I’ll leave much of my thoughts on the matter for a post-weekend post reviewing Dawkins’ The God Delusion.
But I have to chime in briefly by sending you to the relevant links and copying some of the comments I wrote on those comment threads. Brace yourself for a lot of reading as there are several posts and many comments on each of the posts. Sorry, the links are not neccessarly in order, but you’ll get the gist of the argument anyway.
Ed Brayton starts out here and responds to criticisms here.
Larry Moran fires the first salvo here and responds here.
Pat Hayes pitches in here and here.
John Lynch has three posts on the topic: here, here and here.
Buridan clears up some definitions here.
John Pieret takes his side here and here.
John Wilkins just in with this.
PZ Myers (and a gazillion commenters) responds to the whole brouhaha here.
[Update: Josh Rosenau and Mike Dunford have some thoughts on the issue as well.]
[Update 2: Ed Brayton, John Pieret and John Lynch have added further responses.]
[Update 3: Razib, John and Ed have more…and now Josh again! And a good one from Tyler again. And now also Daniel Rhoads. And also Paul Decelles.]
Whoa! What an internecine war! By now, you know that “M&M” stands for Myers&Moran and my title of this post tells you where I stand.
First, let me copy a little quote from my review of Ken Miller’s talk:

“A few years ago, I was of the mind that something like theistic evolution is a good idea to spread the message that evolution is not evil. I thought that people like Ken Miller are great messengers to soften up the people (step 1) and prepare them for eventual compIete abandonment of the Creator (step 2). And even those who never get to Step 2 are less dangerous than straight-out creationists.
I certainly have no problems with anyone personally believing whatever they want. But I am more and more moving to the opinion that this is not a good strategy. It is just providing the apologia for the believers who have a problem with being perceived as medieval, and allowing them to, then, provide apologia for their more extreme brethren. They – the moderates and the fundies – flock together when the going gets tough and it really counts – the political battles between 15th and 21st centuries.
The moderates are no friends of reason when it counts the most, outside of comfortable chats on panels on campuses. Evolution battle is not a battle of science, it is a battle of mindsets and worldviews: medieval vs. modern. Giving a helping hand to those who give their helping hand to the medieval bigots and authoritarians is not a good strategy. They need to be made uncomfortable – Dawkins-style – and forced to choose and come clear with which side they are on. Otherwise, they’ll play nice with us when it does not matter, and stick their fingers in their ears and sing “la-la-la” when real action is required.”

People who focus narrowly on preventing IDC form entering schools do not see the big picture, i.e., that Creationism Is Just One Symptom Of Conservative Pathology (go read that post now!). Thus, people like Dawkins, Myers (or me) are fighting against the bad politics of the church.
While Lennonnesque Imaginings of a world without religion are cute fantasies, we are a little bit more realistic. We know that religion is here to stay no matter what we do and we know that even organized religion can be and has been harnessed for change for good (as in Civil Rights movement). So, we want to fight against the political (added clarification: conservative) aggressiveness of churches in all spheres – creationism being just one of the prongs of their multi-prong strategy to roll back Enlightement.
While evolutionary biologists and philosophers of science are best suited to counteract creationism (and reproductive and developmental biologists to counteract abstinence-only education, opposition to abortion, stem-cell research and cloning, and psychologists and others should use their knowledge to counteract other prongs of their strategy), we need to all be aware that there is a big picture and that we need to work on it all together.
Part of the battle is to force the mealy-mouthed “moderates” to choose sides. ‘Mealy-mouthed’ moderates are, for instance, “liberal Christians” who believe in evolution and are generally on right side of issues but do not raise any voices against their fundie brethren and, when push comes to shove, side with them (as they are all Christians) against us. [added: this group also includes closet atheists/agnostics too afraid to speak up]
Different targets will respond to different tactics. Dawkins/Harris/Dennett tactic WILL work as one part of the strategy, targeting particular groups, and moreover changing the environment in which the debate is fought (a little bit of niche-construction). Ken Miller and those folks have their roles and can move over other types of people to choose sides.
The M&M approach is only going to push the true fundies away and they are already as far away as can be. The moderates – those who are culturally religious but on the right side on most scientific, moral and social issues – are unlikely to be pushed away by M&M rhetoric, and may even get a validation from it and get pushed in the opposite direction.
Dawkins, Harris and Dennett are changing the landscape of the discourse, forming an environment in which it is possible to talk about atheism and religion on a level field. Without them, we’d be forced to hide our atheism even more than before and allow the fundies to define us as amoral.
In other words, focusing only on preventing creationism from entering schools is missing the forest for the trees. We have managed to win a bunch of court cases, the latest one in Dover. But we have not won in the court of public opinion. And, if the entire religious plan succeeds, the courts of the future will be filled with clones of Priscilla Owen and all our victories against Creationism (and the Pledge of Allegiance, prayer in school, ten commandments in courthouses…) will be reversed.
Thus, in order to win the war, we have to engage the enemy at all fronts, not just the one where we feel like it. Let’s look at some previous success stories.
Women did not gain equality by being quiet and not rocking the boat. African-Amercans did not gain equality by being quiet and not rocking the boat. Gays did not gain equality by being quiet and not rocking the boat.
What those three groups did, and are still doing, is changing the discourse by being darn loud! A hundred years ago, a woman was a man’s property – not any more, and it is deemed extremely vile to suggest so in this day and age. Fifty years ago, stating that Blacks and Whites should be separated because Blacks are stupid and dangerous was a mainstream position – try saying that today and see what happens to you! Ten years ago, saying you are gay invited getting beaten up. See what just a decade of loud agitation has done – some kind of movement towards the right direction (gay marriage of civil unions) in several US states, Canada, Spain, UK, South Africa, now even Israel!
The first, loud pioneers set the stage for the debate and move the goalposts. They often endanger themselves initially, but their example prompts many others to come out of the closet. There are always those who are too afraid to speak out, to rock the boat. They try to talk the enemy out of destroying them instead of exposing the enemy for the brute it is. Being moderate, playing nice, and appeasing the fundies hellbent on destroying you is not a working strategy. Building a large, loud, uncompromising and powerful movement is. Ridiculing the enemy in the public sphere and changing the discourse – what is mainstream and what is not – gradually wins our wars against the anti-Enlightement forces.
If you go to feminist, Black and LGTB blogs, you’ll see that it is easy for them to make fun of latest rantings by white, rich males, like Brooks, Tierney and Derbyshire. But they have particular ire against people of their own who either side with the enemy or allow to be manipulated by the enemy – the antifeminist women, the Blacks who push (as Republican officials, usually) the anti-Black agenda, the Mehlmans and other gays in the GOP who actively work on anti-gay legislation. Why is it suprising that such a thing would not happen in the, much newer and younger, atheist movement?
The silent reverence for religion is something quite American. You need to read this to understand where I come from. In Yugoslavia, in 1941 everyone was officially religious, in 1951 some people were religious but were too afraid to say so because they feared persecution, in 1961, some people were still religious (although getting older), they went to church on Sunday but did not tout their religiosity in fear of ridicule. By the time I was aware of my surroundings in the 1970s and 1980s, only very few people were religious, those were very old and mostly in the countryside and nobody my age believed in God:

“The resurgence of religion in the area in the 1990s is fascinating to me. I do not believe that most of those people are really religious i.e., believe in God. It is purely a political instrument, as well as a way to use easily recognizable signals to differentiate between ethnic groups that are otherwise indistinguishable. Thus Serbs started sporting Orthodox paraphernalia, Croats Catholic stuff, and Bosnians Islamic symbols.”

The Western pundits, steeped in their own culture, quite erroneously labeled the Balkan conflict a “religious war”. It was more a war between the fans of Red Star, Dinamo and Zeljeznicar soccer clubs. And while the decade of wars and economic sanctions, coupled with migrations of the best-educated abroad and the country-folks into cities, made public religiosity by Right-wing extremists OK, the country is still predominantly atheist and secular. See this if you don’t believe.
Here in the USA, we cannot institute a top-down government-sponsored ridicule of religion. The system works differently here. Big societal changes, including changes in how we think about issues, are brought about by large, loud movements. But if atheists form such a movement – and this looks like a great time for a backlash against the fundamentalist overreaching – the discourse will change. Nobody in the next generation will fall for the idiotic notion that atheists are immoral. And, just like the communist government in the old Yugoslavia realized, there is no need for any kind of legislation banning religion and religious activities – public ridicule does the job marvelously on itself.
In this post (another must-read) I wrote:

Thus, we need to see the battle over evolution not as a separate battle, but as a part of a bigger war between Enlightement and Anti-Enlightement. One cannot be won without the other. And while some battles in this war can be and should be fought at the level of national politics, the battle over education, including the battle over evolution, requires us to get at their kids. For that, we need to go local. Winning cases in court works only for the short term – they will come again and again and, with conservative activist judges being appointed left and right, they will start winning soon. Getting elected to school-boards, teaching in schools, teaching the teachers, pushing for non-test-based educational systems, pushing for tests of critical thinking (including evolutionary thinking) in schools as well as for home-schooled children, …those are the ways to fight them long term, thus the only way to win this battle. Winning this battle – the battle over childrearing and education – will be the key for winning the whole war long term. Without new recruits from the new generations of children, the forces of Anti-Enlightement will dwindle in numbers, lose power, and finally die out. As a liberal, I am an optimist, a believer in progress, and cannot see how, in the long term they can win and we can lose. But in the meantime we need to fight to prevent them from incurring too much damage while they still have the power. Explaining evolution over and over again is not the way to do it.

But the project I describe here can only be succesful if the social and political environment allows it. And to change the discourse, to start getting taken seriously, and to change what is mainstream and what is not we need more M&Ms. If reason prevails and fundamentalism looses, then nobody will ever overturn our legal victories against Creationists. If we keep winning anti-IDC cases but ignore the environment in which it all happens, we will soon start loosing in courts as well. It’s fine if Ken Millers of the world want to help out in IDC cases and to move some minds on their lecture circuits, but in the long run, they’ll have to decide are they on the side of reason or on the side of their religion which also includes the most politically active fundies.
Dawkins is correct:

I tell Dawkins what he already knows: He is making life harder for his friends. He barely shrugs. “Well, it’s a cogent point, and I have to face that. My answer is that the big war is not between evolution and creationism, but between naturalism and supernaturalism. The sensible” – and here he pauses to indicate that sensible should be in quotes – “the ‘sensible’ religious people are really on the side of the fundamentalists, because they believe in supernaturalism. That puts me on the other side.”

Thanksgivings prayer

In the past we had to make sure to remember to tell the kids not to make fun of their cousins (and adults) for saying a prayer before the Thanksgivings dinner. We tried to give a personal example by holding hands with other family members, bowing our heads and supressing laughter for the duration.
This year, for the first time, we had a Thanksgivings dinner at home, just the four of us. When the dinner was served and we sat around the table we looked at each other with a question mark on our faces – what to do? My wife saved the day:”Thank God we do not have to say a prayer tonight!”
Amen.
Then, we had some “Evolution” wine from Sokol Blosser Winery.

Cell-Cell Interactions

Cell-Cell InteractionsContinuing with my BIO101 lecture notes (May 08, 2006). As always, please correct my errors and make suggestions in the comments.

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SBC – NC’07

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David Bradley of Sciencebase is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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It’s all connected, if you are smart enough to see it

Al Gore’s big issue is the environment. He says he is not running for President. Maybe he will, maybe he won’t. But no matter what happens, it is obvious that the environment is Gore’s passion and that he will spend the rest of his life fighting for it. His passion is what drives so many people to push him to run for office again.
John Edwards’ big issue is poverty. He is likely to run for President again. Maybe he will win, maybe he won’t. But no matter what happens, it is obvious that eradication of poverty is Edwards’ passion and that he will spend the rest of his life fighting for it. His passion is what drives so many people to full-heartedly support him in his bid for Presidency even before he has officially announced.
On the other hand, Newt Gingrich’ big issue is getting power for himself. So, he promises big ideas (again!? Please no more Contracts On America!) because he thinks it is hip these days to have a passion:

I’m going to tell you something, and whether or not it’s plausible given the world you come out of is your problem’ …. ‘I am not ‘running’ for president. I am seeking to create a movement to win the future by offering a series of solutions so compelling that if the American people say I have to be president, it will happen.’

So, what exactly is this passion of his, what ideas, apart from wanting to live in the White House?
What Newt does not understand, and both Gore and Edwards do, is that one cannot fake passion. Also, passion for dismantling the edifice of the state is not something that one can sell to the American people any more. After Katrina, everyone figured out what railing against Big Government really means.
Another thing that Newt thinks, in his immense reaches of egotism, is that suggesting a complex, all-encompassing program of reform will paint him as sophisticated as opposed to single-issue Gore and single-issue Edwards. If his monumental plan is anything like Contract On America, it is a laundry list of policies that the rich would like to see implemented so they do not have to worry about their money any more.
On the other hand, people who have watched Gore’s movie (or speeches, or read his books), as well as people who are paying close attention to Edwards’ activities, speeches and writings, understand that both of them are much more sophisticated thinkers than Newt can ever hope of becoming. For each, the main issue, the one they are passionate about (environment and poverty), is just the focal point of a much broader reform.
Taking money from the rich and giving it to the poor is not a long-term strategy that can eliminate poverty. Short term, it is good for the poor – they can buy houses, cars, food, health insurance, etc. As they buy those things, where does that money go? Back to the rich, the people who sold them the houses, cars, food and health insurance. And we are back to where we started…
For poverty to be eradicated, the structure of America has to change. We need to rethink and reform the structure of our economic and financial system. The tax code needs to be given a good, long look. Universal health care is a must. The way we produce food is in a need of some radical restructuring. Energy independence, apart from eliminating the need for further Middle-East adventures as well as obvious positive environmental consequences, is also neccessary for the elimination of poverty. Environment itself is an important determinant of poverty. Breaking down the power of megacompanies to influence the lawmakers to enact legislation that protects the Big Fish from the dangers of competition from midsize and small businesses, in other words allowing the free market to freely operate, is also neccessary for elimination of poverty. Changing the infrastructure – the sprawling cities built for cars, the faceless suburbs and exurbs, the little hamlets and hollers isolated from civilization, millions of people living in mobile-home tenements, the lack of trains and cable internet – all of that needs to be adressed in order to address the problem of poverty. Education and science are neccessary for long-term plans for eradication of poverty. For any of those reforms to happen, the way government operates needs to change, and this can happen only if the election rules change. And election rules can change only if the media gets a few electroshocks. So, everything is intertwined.
Gore knows this – the environment is his litmus test. If the environment is improving, this means that everything else is also functioning properly. Edwards knows this – the poverty is his litmus test. If poverty is going away, this means that everything else is also functioning properly. Voters can sense this sophistication. Many other leading Democrats do not “get it” just as well yet and campaign either on a laundry-list of policy proposals (many of which sound quite recycled) or on an anti-Iraq-war sentiment, not realizing that Iraq is just one of many symptoms of a much bigger problem. I have yet to meet a Republican who has any idea what I am talking about in the above paragraph. Certainly not Newt.

HomeBlogging

At the Blogger MeetUp the other night, among many other topics we covered, someone (I think it was Anton) asked if we ever blogged about our homes, houses, childhood memories of home…
Now that John Edwards is travelling around the country promoting his new book – Home: The Blueprints of Our Lives – the idea of writing about one’s childhood home seems quite interesting.
I am no lyrical writer and I have no idea what to say about my childhood home, but David Kirk rose to the occasion today and wrote a beautiful and touching essay about his childhood home. It is a great story for the holiday.
Now, will you write about your home?

Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

My son wants Wii for Hannukkah and he will get it. According to Jonah, it’s good for you in more ways than just training in spatial orientation. You get a physical workout and you get drawn deeper into the game which will, presumably, make violence, aggression, injuries and death more realistic and thus may have the opposite effect of cartoonish effects of older video games or even watching carnage on TV news. You may even start emphatizing and thinking about the meaning of life! Who knows – time will tell.
But, and I did not think of this, Wii may do something more. Brian Russell muses, in two posts, about another Wii potential – replacing a PC! It has an Internet connection and a browser and a bunch of other stuff that makes it a social networking tool. Will Wii-sphere be the next generation’s blogosphere?