Change Of Shift, v.1, n.1

The very first edition of Change Of Shift, the new carnival of nursing is up on the wonderful Kim’s Emergiblog.

I and the Bird #26

A delightful World Cup-themed edition of I and the Bird is up on The Hawk Owls’ Nest. A great round-up and an excellent example of creative hosting.
Next edition is the First Year Anniversary of the carnival, so it goes back home to 10000 Birds. The theme is “why you blog, why you bird, or why you blog about birds”. Send your entries to Mike by July 5.

She Blinded Me With Science!

I am a science teacher. I think I am actually a pretty good science teacher. So, it came to me as a surprise as how much I was baffled by the new SEED AskTheScienceBlogger question:

What makes a good science teacher?…

The answer, I guess, depends on the precise definitions of the words “makes”, “good”, “science” and “teacher”.
[read the rest under the fold]

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Soccer and the World

Via Accidental Blogger, come these truly amazing photos of Hindu ascetics playing soccer. I wish they qualified for the World Cup! On only slightly more serious note, Ruchira Paul has an interesting post on Soccer and Political Theory. Dou you agree with the premise?

This Day In History

Gavin de Beer died on this day in 1972. Aydin Örstan wrote the best post for the occasion (also cross-posted on Transitions)

Tangled Bank

Tangled Bank #56 is up on Centrerion. Although I e-mailed in a few posts, none got published – ah, well.

Translated!

My post about sleep has been translated by Davide ‘Folletto’ Casali into Italian, and posted on his blog. You can see the translated post here. If you can read Italian (and even you do not – just for fun, and to reward his hard work), go and look around his blog.

Carnival of the Liberals #15

Carnival of the Liberals is up on Varkam’s portion of the group-blog Neural Gourmet. This is a competitive carnival where the host picks the Ten Best Posts of the week, out of several dozens entries. I am very happy to see that Top Ten this week include four posts from science blogs, and of those, two are from scienceblogs.com.

New York City trip – Part VII: Spamalot

Saturday, May 27th
After revising our strategy – substituting quality for quantity – we had a good night’s sleep and woke up at a more decent time on Saturday morning. I took the kids down to the hotel restaurant for breakfast for some delicious pancakes and waffles, while Mrs. Coturnix went to buy some matinee tickets for whichever (family-friendly) Broadway show she could get. ‘Wicked’ was the first choice, but those tickets have been sold out for months in advance. A couple of hours later, after waiting in the long line twice, she finally got a good deal on tickets for Spamalot from a scalpel and joined us at breakfast.
(cont. under the fold)

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Kevin in China, part 2: Three Kinds of Natural Beauty in Jiuchong

Here is the first of Kevin’s e-mailed reports from China, dated June 1-3, 2006. In it, you will be able to see pictures of some natural beauty he saw in China, then another kind of natural beauty he saw in China, then yet another kind of natural beauty he saw in China….
I love the way he writes – he should (will?) be a great blogger. What a combination of a travelogue, a personal diary, and lab notes of a research scientist – all in one, the three aspects of it connected seamlessly into a single narrative. I hope you enjoy it as much as I do. So, without further ado, here is Kevin:

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Sixth Sense? Give Me A Break!

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This was my December 29, 2004 post written in reaction to media reports on the “sixth sense” in animals, avoiding the tsunami by climbing to high ground:

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EduCarnivals

New Teaching Carnival (HigherEd) is up on Raining Cats And Dogma.
The latest edition of the Carnival of Education is up on Why Homeschool.
Bird-themed Carnival of Homeschooling is up on HomeSchoolBuzz.E

DonorsChoose Update

Again, Janet has an update:

At last count, we’ve gotten $12,325.59 (not counting the $10,000 match from SEED) from 152 generous donors — that’s an average of $81.09 per donor.

There is more, and hopefully more people will donate between now and July 1st.

She rips him a new ozone hole!

For a particularly juicy manner of dealing with a global warming denier (and general wackjob) Dennis Prager, read Amanda’s delicious rant: Gasbag expands as global temperatures rise.

Snakes On The Plain: Kevin in China

Let’s see how many people incapable of spelling ‘plane’ arrive here by the way of Google. But I am talking about a real ‘plain’ – a big one, in China, and about some very real live snakes as well!
A good friend (and ex-neighbor) of mine, Kevin Messenger, is in China right now, surveying herpetofauna (that is – reptiles and amphibians, for the non-biologists here) in a remote area of central China, rarely visited by Weesterners, and never before surveyed by scientists.
He is one of those natural-born herpetologists – he lives, breathes and dreams snakes. When I lived in Raleigh I would often see him pull up with his truck next door. He would holler “Hey, Bora! Come see what I got today!”. I’d walk over there and watch the bags in his truck wriggle. He would open one bag at a time, with a gleam in his eyes, showing me “the biggest rattler I ever caught!” and “hey, this one is so rare around here” and “isn’t this one pretty?” His house was full of animals, mostly herps (his veterinarian sister has her own menagerie – but her animals mostly had eyelids), and he always had great stories to tell from his surveys in the Sandhills.
He gave a talk about his research at the meeting of the Society for Herpetology when he was still in high school! He published his first paper when he was a freshman. I will, at some point in the future, write about his excellent paper on the effects of moonlight on snake activity in the Sandhills. The research in China is going to be his MS work, although he just graduated college and has yet to start grad school. Still, since the first day at NCSU he knew he was going to do graduate work with Hal Heathwole, and Hal knew it, too.
As he is sleeping in a tent somewhere in China right now, you can imagine how hard it is for him to get online. He was thinking about recording his trip and his work on a blog, but had to give that idea up – it is just impossible in his situation. Still, every now and then he goes to visit the civilization and manages to send an e-mail or two. He asked me to post his essays here, on my blog. Once he comes back home in Fall, he may republish them elsewhere on the Web, either on a static page, or on a blog that he may wish to continue to write afterwards.
Kevin has sent me a few installments already – they ar fascinating, believe me – which I will post over the next several days. He even managed to send me some pictures of the animals he saw there and I will post those as well. As the new stories and pics come in, I will post them here as well.
Today, I will start with Kevin’s introductory autobiography and description of his researh – under the fold:

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Time is on my side…or behind me…or in front of me…or whatever!

Yes, I know that I am supposed to be the resident expert on all things temporal (check the name of this blog, after all), and I am actually very interested in the topic of subjective perception of time (in humans, among others), but I did not say anything about the latest study on the Aymara language in which the space-time metaphors are reversed in comparison to most/all (is it not all or is it really all?) other known languages. SEED just released an article on the topic as well.
Blogosphere covered the story quite a lot, but I was waiting for the real experts on this to chime in, and they delivered with gusto! Dave and Greta have written not one, but two posts on the topic (so far?).
Now Chris (of Mixing Memory blog) has written a post as well, as I just knew he would – how could he resist. After all, this is something that is up his alley and he has written two excellent posts on the topic before – I urge you to check them out here and here.

Grand Rounds 2:39

New edition of the medical carnival is up on Psychological Perspectives.

I, Coturnix (or, Why I Am An Atheist)

ClockWeb%20logo2.JPG This is an early post of mine, written on February 11, 2005, a rare one in which I discuss my own lack of religion:

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A New Carnival!

Pedro Beltrao, who blogs on Public Rambling is starting Bio::Blogs, a carnival of bioinformatics and computational biology.

DonorsChoose is spreading….

There is another science blogger joining us in the DonorsChoose fundraiser. Check out the challenge set up by Deep-Sea News blog.
Pharyngula has closed the challenge, so you can help other bloggers complete their challenges now.

Carnival of the Green

The 32nd edition of the Carnival of the Green is now up on Savvy Vegetarian.

The Future of Terrorism

The July issue of Discover Magazine has an excellent article on The Future of Terrorism. You should readthe whole thing, online or in hardcopy. Here are some choice quotes by people interviewed for the article:

“The war on terrorism is really a proxy for saying what is really a war on militant Islam. If we can’t confront the ideology, if you’re not willing to take on the ideology and try to develop a reformist, moderate Islam that makes militant Islam a fringe element, we haven’t much hope to stamp it out.”

Andrew C. McCarthy, former federal prosecutor who led the case against Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman.

“A nuclear terrorism attack is inevitable if we continue on the autopilot path we’re on.” The odds of a nuclear attack on U.S. soil in the next five years are “51-49.”

Graham Allison, assistant secretary of defense in the first Clinton administration and now director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University

“I’m less worried about terrorists becoming biologists than biologists becoming terrorists”

Gerald Epstein, senior fellow at the Homeland Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.

“It’s easy to go around whipping up hysteria. I’m not a terrorism expert, but they seem to favor things that blow up and make loud noises rather than subtle increases in deaths from infectious agents.”

Biologist Craig Venter, who is skeptical of the bioterrorism threat.

“The current leadership of the terrorist organizations are of a generation that doesn’t trust cyber means of attack. Once we see a new generation of leadership that is more comfortable with technology, we’re going to see more of this.”

Mike Skroch, Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

“You can never get a fingerprint online, but you can get a writeprint.” If there is a new message, I can tell you if it’s from Bin Laden or his lieutenant.”

Hsinchun Chen, designer of the Dark Web Project

“Do I think we’ll ever stop it? Could we get it to a manageable level? I think we can do that.”

Howard Safir, former New York City police commissioner

“We know from the basis of past periods of terrorism that they don’t last forever. This is a phenomenon, as troubling as it is, that will turn out to have a beginning, middle, and end.”

Michael Barkun, political scientist at the Maxwell School in Syracuse, New York

The most advanced technology that terrorists have at their disposal is television. “Essentially, it’s an image war. PR is everything in terrorism. Why? Look at what the terrorists are trying to achieve: political or ideological change. And if people don’t buy into a doctrine, the terrorists can’t succeed.”

Graham Dillon, heads the financial-crime advisory service of the London branch of the accounting firm KPMG

“There would be such enormous pressure for an immediate and devastating political response. Three Algerians from Paris blow up a bomb in Washington; we vaporize Tehran and get rid of everybody we don’t like: anyone who’s strategically culpable, whom we believe either supports terrorism [or] sponsors it directly or indirectly. If that happens, the world would be as different a place as after World War II.”

Scott Atran, an anthropologist at the University of Michigan and at the National Center for Scientific Research in Paris

“You can do preventative things. And you can make people safer. You can’t make people safe. You are never safe, because in an open and free society you’re always vulnerable to people who are extreme.”

Howard Safir

ClockTutorial #1 – What Is Chronobiology

ClockWeb%20logo2.JPG This is the first in a series of posts from Circadiana designed as ClockTutorials, covering the basics of the field of Chronobiology. It was first written on January 12, 2005:

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Melatonin in Human Milk

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

Melatonin is secreted in human mother’s milk with a daily rhythm – high at night, undetectable during the day (see the figure under the fold):

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DonorsChoose Update

Sandra Porter was out of town, but now she’s back and she is joining the DonorsChoose drive – the 20th scienceblogger to do so. Furthermore, she is adding some cool new prizes to the prize pool – check ’em out. Go to Sandy’s challenge here.
Also, one of the non-scienceblog science blogs – the Northstate Science is joining the drive. Check out their projects.
Seven of my 25 programs have been funded so far, including the donations from five of my readers with a total of $582.52. Thank you!
Update: Janet has the full update on the SB drive.

New York City trip – Part VI: Darwin

Friday, May 26th
Afternoon
Pictures%20206.jpg
So, about noon or so, we finally got to the American Museum of Natural History. I was pretty smart, actually… A few months ago, when we first started thinking about making this trip, I decided not to renew my subscription to Natural History Magazine, but to subscribe my wife instead. So, when we arrived at the museum, we skipped the long ticket lines and went straight to the “Members” desk, where my wife got a little discount, I got a student discount (yes, I still have a valid student ID – officially they did not kick me out yet), and the kids ar, quite obviously, still ’12 or under’, so they got discounted tickets as well. And the process was fast.[more under the fold]

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Pascal’s birthday

From today’s Quotes of the Day:

Blaise Pascal was born at Clermont-Ferrand, in the Auvergne region of France, on this day in 1623. Educated at home by his father, he was a child prodigy and made significant contributions to the construction of mechanical calculators and the study of fluids. In mathematics he published a treatise on projection geometry (whatever that is!) at age sixteen and his work in probability theory is still important in economics today. In 1654 he had a vision upon awaking from a coma following a carriage accident, and devoted the rest of his life to philosophy and theology, the source of the quotes below:

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Carnivalesque

Ready for some history blogging? New edition of Early Modern Carnivalesque is up on The Virtual Stoa.

New Button

If you look up, just below the banner, there is a new button “Banner Art”.. My recent post about the banner is soon going to go off the page, so this is the way to make the information available at all times with just one click….

Things to read today…

The Tar Heel Tavern (carnival of North Carolina blogging) #69 is up on Poetic Acceptance, and, as the number implies, the theme is Reciprocity.
In other news, Rivka of ‘Respectful of Otters’ is back from a long hiatus and is blogging again.

This Day In History, again

On June 18th (year undisclosed, under the pain of torture, not to mention prolonged abstinence), a baby girl was born. She was born in Richmond, VA, quite by accident – although from an old Raliegh family, her father was doing his residency in Richmond at the time. She grew up in Raleigh, and, many years later, said “I do”. I said “I do” at the same time and in the same room (no church ceremonies for us hard-core atheists!). Happy birthday!
On June 18th, 1991, I woke up very early in the morning, picked up my backpack and hailed a taxi. My parents and I went down to the Belgrade train station. I got on the train which took me through what, about a week or two later, would become three countries: Serbia, Croatia and Slovenia, but at the time were still one – Yugoslavia. Next day, I got off the train in London. Next day, a plane took me from Heathrow to JFK. Next day, I landed in North Carolina. I am still in North Carolina. It’s a beautiful day.

This Day In History

On June 17th, 1858 (I know, I missed by less than an hour), Charles Darwin received a letter from Alfred Russel Wallace. The letter contained the explanation of the principle of natural selection. Thus, Darwin was forced to act, and act fast. After reading both Wallace’s and his own acccount of natural selection to the Royal Society, he got down to work. Instead of a multi-tome monograph he was planning on writing (which, if nothing else due its sheer size, would not have had quite as wide readership), he quickly jotted down a slim volume which, for the Victorian era, was a surprisingly easy and captivating read – The Origin of Species. The first edition was sold out on the very first day and the book became an instant hit. The rest, as they say, is history. (Hat-tip to my friend Jim who actually remembered the date and realized the anniversary of this momentous event was today, OK last night, but teh wine was good and I got home after midnight).

Pediatric Garden

The very first edition of Mendel’s Garden, the carnival of genetics, is up on The Force That Through….
Pediatric Grand Rounds, Volume 1 Edition 5, is up on Unintelligent Design.

“…they’re just itching to get out!”

Back To The Woom is a blog that needs to get much more exposure. It is written by a very smart couple here in Raleigh, NC. The posts are always very thoughtfull and well-researched and the topics range from Ann Raynd to immigration, from capital punishment to harsh capitalism. Always worth your time to read (even if you disagree on a detail or two).
This time, I’d like to point your attention to the latest post – The moral majority is watching your inner child molester:

The implication is that, without the threat of eventual punishment at the hands of an omniscient cosmic dictator, many of us would just abandon all the ethical, social and juridical obligations that had hitherto constrained our behavior. Yep, God is all that keeps you from combusting into a terrible, murderous fury!

It describes what psychologists call the External Locus of Moral Authority. Go and check it out.

DonorsChoose Update

My readers have, so far, raised $557.52 and fully funded two of the 25 challenges [update: five of 25]! Way to go! Thank you. There is still plenty of time until July 1st to fund some more science teachers and their underprivileged students. Janet has an update on the entire ScienceBlogs challenge.
Apparently, readers of Pharyngula have already met and exceededthe goal after just two days!
Greta and Dave are matching your donations to their causes.
David and Benjamin will publish your haiku!
Ten copies of SAMS Teach Yourself Blogging in a Snap have been added to the prizes pool, so when you donate, do not forget to put your name in the hat by forwarding your DonorsChoose confirmation e-mail to: sbDOTdonorschooseDOTbonanzaATgmailDOTcom .

BIO101 – Lecture 7 – Physiology: Coordinated Response

Last week we looked at the organ systems involved in regulation and control of body functions: the nervous, sensory, endocrine and circadian systems. This week, we will cover the organ systems that are regulated and controlled. Again, we will use the zebra-and-lion example to emphasize the way all organ systems work in concert to maintain the optimal internal conditions of the body:

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Obligatory Reading of the Day

I am sorry to hear that First Year Teacher is leaving my state, but after reading the Resignation Letter, I understand why.

Carnival Roundup

Next Teaching Carnival (higher ed) will be on or after June 16th, 2006 on Raining Cats and Dogma.
First Mendel’s Garden (genetics) will be on June 18th, 2006 on The force that through….
Next Pediatric Grand Rounds will be on June 18th, 2006, on Unintelligent Design.
Next Carnival of the Green (sustainability, environment, conservation) will be on June 19th, 2006 on Savvy Vegetarian.
Next Carnival of Bad History (misuse and abuse of history) will be on June 20, 2006 on Frog In A Well[thanks to Jonathan Dresner for updating me on this]
Next Grand Rounds (medicine) will be on June 20th on Psychological Perspectives.
Next Carnival of Homeschooling (homeschooling) will be on June 20th, 2006 on HomeSchoolBuzz.
Next Tangled Bank (science, nature, medicine, environment and interaction between science and society) will be on 21 Jun 2006 on Centrerion.
Next Carnival of the Liberals (lefty politics) will be on June 21st, 2006 on Neural Gourmet (Varkam’s blog).
Next Carnival of Education (teaching, educational policy) will be on June 21th, 2006 on Why Homeschool.
Next Skeptic’s Circle (pseudocscience, quackery and such) will be on June 22, 2006 on Autism Diva.
Next I And The Bird (birding and birdwatching) will be on June 22, 2006 on The Hawk Owls’ Nest.
First Change Of Shift (nursing) will be on June 22nd, 2006 on Emergiblog.
Next Friday Ark (animals) will be on June 23th, 2006 on The Modulator.
Next Carnival of the Godless (religion from godless perspective) will be on June 25, 2006 on Silly Humans.
First The Synapse (neurobiology, brain and behavior) will be on June 25th, 2006 on Pure Pedantry.
First Radiology Grand Rounds will be on June 25th, 2006 on Sumer’s Radiology Site.
Next Carnivalesque (alternating between early modern and ancient & medieval history) will be on 20-ish of June at an undisclosed location.
Next Circus of the Spineless (invertebrates) will be on June 30th, 2006 on Science And Sensibility.
First Festival of the Trees (trees) will be on July 1st, 2006, on Via Negativa.
History Carnival (history) will be on July 1st, 2006 at Chapati Mystery.[thanks to Sharon for updating me on this]
The first Encephalon (cognitive neuroscience) will be on July 3rd, 2006 on Neurophilosopher’s blog.
Next Philosophy Carnival (philosophy) will be on July 3rd, 2006 on Adventures in Ethics and Science.
Next Animalcules (microorganisms) will be on July 13th, 2006 on Science Matters.

Obligatory Reading of the Day

WHERE’S YOUR FLAG?

Carnival of the Liberals – call for submissions

Message from the proprietors of the Carnival of the Liberals:

Dear Liberal Carnivalers,
Did you think we’d disappeared? Don’t worry (or celebrate), you’re not getting rid of us that easily!
Some logistical issues caused a bit of a delay and resulted in The Uncredible Hallq swapping hosting slots with Varkam at Neural Gourmet. Varkam will be hosting Carnival of the Liberals #15 on Wednesday, June 21st and and the deadline is Tuesday, June 20th by 7PM EDT. So, what are you waiting for? Get to sending in those submissions!
Note: Anyone who sent in something prior to this message, there’s no need to resend it. Varkam has a copy of everybody’s submissions thus far.
BTW: We’ve still got hosting slots in August (16th and 30th), so if anyone’s interested, shoot me an e-mail. We’ve had a lot of new people participating in CotL in recent weeks, so why not give a thought to hosting? We’d love to see some new faces taking a turn at their own editions.
See everyone Wednesday at Neural Gourmet!

Counter-Coulter action

Greensmile of The Executioners Thong blog has a question. He (sorry for gender confusion – edited) is offering to set up an automated webpage which people can use to send letters to the advertisers and sponsors of TV shows that allow right-wing talking points (e.g., having Coulter a as a guest) to be aired unchallenged. Woudl you be interested? If so (or if not and have a good reason to explain why not), go over there and chime in in the comments.
What kind of people on what kind of shows? Here is a short sampler.

Take a Merlot pill?

Interesting:
Melatonin may be found in grapes

MILAN, Italy, June 16 (UPI) — Scientists in Italy say they have discovered that the grapes used in popular red wines may contain high levels of the sleep hormone melatonin.
Melatonin is naturally secreted by the pineal gland in the brain, especially at night, and it tells the body when it is time to sleep, according to researcher Iriti Marcello at the University of Milan.

Hey, hey, what do you say:

Until recently, melatonin was thought to be exclusively produced by mammals, but has recently been discovered in plants.

Excuse me, but we’ve known for decades that melatonin is produced by all vertebrates, many, many invertebrates, some protists (including sea kelp), and, yes many plants. Bananas are famous for their high melatonin content.

Iriti’s study, published in the Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, discovered high levels of melatonin in Nebbolo, Merlot, Cabernet Savignon, Sangiovesse and Croatina grape varieties.
“The melatonin content in wine could help regulate the circadian rhythm — sleep-wake patterns — just like the melatonin produced by the pineal gland in mammals,” says Marcello.
However, Richard Wurtman of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, says he is unconvinced and believes further research is needed to determine whether the compounds discovered are melatonin — or something very similar.

Wonder why Wurtman said this? I’d need to look at the paper – why is it considered to be iffy. Melatonin assays are pain in the behind to do, but they work.
Anyone, whatever benefits melatonin may have to put one to sleep in the evening probably require imbibing vast quantities of wine which also contains alcohol which fragments sleep (or eating a few pounds of grapes not selected for table use) – thus countering the effects of melatonin. Cute idea, anyway.

The wee, tiny, little ones….

Animalcules 1.9, the carnival of microscopic life, is up on Aetiology. This is the first time I don’t have anything there – just too swamped with everything. I promise I’ll be good next time.

BIO101 – Lecture 6 – Physiology: Regulation and Control

It is impossible to cover all organ systems in detail over the course of just two lectures. Thus, we will stick only to the basics. Still, I want to emphasize how much organ systems work together, in concert, to maintain the homeostasis (and rheostasis) of the body. I’d also like to emphasize how fuzzy are the boundaries between organ systems – many organs are, both anatomically and functionally, simultaneously parts of two or more organ systems. So, I will use an example you are familiar with from our study of animal behavior – stress response – to illustrate the unity of the well-coordinated response of all organ systems when faced with a challenge. We will use our old zebra-and-lion example as a roadmap in our exploration of (human, and generally mammalian) physiology:

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One Week Update

There are some excellent news from Seed overlords. They will add to our DonorsChoose educational action for science and math programs for underfunded schools. You can see the donation thermometer on the sidebar of about 20 blogs here, including mine. We are doing excellent – my readers have already donated $342.26 and other bloggers are also doing fine – we have two weeks to go.
Now Seed bosses have announced that they will match our donations, up to $10,000. So, if all the bloggers combined raise $10, 000 or more, SEED will donate an additional ten grand! You will be able to see regular updates on the drive on Adventures in Ethics and Science, including the complete list of participating bloggers. And the drawing for prizes will be on July 1st.
On a less charitable and more egotistic note, noon today marks exactly one week since the grand opening of the new SEED Scienceblogs homepage and the introduction of all the new blogs here and, how can I put it humbly, I had a really good start here. On the first day – Friday afternoon, I got 564 visits (by Sitemeter). Weekend saw an expected slump: 354 and 401 on two days starting with S. Monday brought in a nice 752. But Tuesday was a killer – a post of mine spread over Digg, Fark and Stumbleupon lists and brought in astonishing 25,986 readers – I printed out that day’s pie-chart from Google Analytics in order to frame it and put it on the wall because it is a unique day in history, unlikely to ever be repeated: my blog brought in more traffic to SEED scienceblogs than Pharyngula (PZ was doing something scary with his tentacles there, but I managed to escape in a cloud of ink). On Wednesday the traffic started dropping off somewhat to 4,491 and Thursday saw 2,064. So far today, I’ve got 664 for a grand weekly total of 35,370! Not bad at all! Keep coming back – there will be more cool posts here every day.
On a less happy note, Serbia&Montenegro lost to Argentina 6:0! I am glad I did not watch it – it would have been heart-breaking!

Book Review: George Lakoff “Moral Politics” and E.J.Graff “What Is Marriage For?”

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This was first posted on http://www.jregrassroots.org/ forums on July 10, 2004, then republished on Science And Politics on August 18, 2004. That was to be just the first, and most raw, post on this topic on my blog. It was followed by about a 100 more posts building on this idea, modifying it, and changing my mind in the process. You can see some of the better follow-ups here. Also, I have since then read Marriage, a History: From Obedience to Intimacy, or How Love Conquered Marriage by Stephanie Coontz, which is a much better and more scholarly work than E.J.Graff’s book. Below the fold is the article with mild edits (e.g., omitting the pre-election hurrays!):

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The Birth of a Were-Thylacine

You will just have to click here to see the pictures…

Home Churching

It is something like homeschooling, except there is no learning involved. People are performing their own private church services at home instead of going to the local megachurch. Why do you think this is catching on? Is it good or bad?

Open Access Peer Review Redefines “Peer”

John Anderson is onto something here….Read his entire article and comment.

Inconvenient Truth

Al Gore’s movie is opening locally tomorrow (though not in the theater up the street) and I am really looking forward to seeing it. I have just read what is, in my opinion, the best review of the movie: Brokeback Earth by Godfrey Cheshire. It is long but well worth your time.
The first page or so is actually about the movie, about the science behind the movie and about Al Gore himself. The latter part, where it starts delving into politics is perhaps the best. Here is just a tiny little excerpt to whet your appetites:

………snip…………
By my not entirely scientific calculations, it was circa the onset of the Reagan administration that many Americans traded a rudimentary engagement with unmediated reality for an addiction to feel-good fantasy as contrived and delivered by an increasingly sophisticated alliance of large corporate and right-wing political interests. The result is something that undermines the single most critical component in a democracy: Many people don’t vote on the basis of self-interest because they can’t identify it. Reality itself has grown malleable. This may be a “soft” Orwellianism, but it’s Orwellian nonetheless. Up is down. In is out. Lies are truth. John Kerry is a Vietnam War shirker, George W. Bush a hero of the same fight.
………snip…………
Likewise, the huge corporate interests that generate our culture’s politicized fantasy have done a remarkably good job in convincing at least half the country that, according to many “experts,” global warming is “unproven” or “controversial.” What chance does a little indie film have against this pervasive climate of disinformation? To put it purely in movie terms, though An Inconvenient Truth’s early earnings were impressive, they were dwarfed by those of The Omen, which tells us that recent natural disasters are due to the approach of the End Times.
………snip…………

Now go and read the whole thing…