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World Food Prize Honors Science Pioneers – Environmentalists Outraged

Posted by on Oct 17, 2013 in Science and Society | Comments Off on World Food Prize Honors Science Pioneers – Environmentalists Outraged

Food, medicine and energy are three of the most crucial problems we face today - and they are all protested by a common demographic.

Science tends to think on the supply side - how to feed more people, how to get energy to everyone, how to save lives - while anti-science activists promote mitigation and rationing and retreating into the past. They believe in 13th century energy that hasn't worked, like wind power, unproven herbal medicines and a food system where only the agricultural 1% will be able to eat.

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Mystery Political Science Theater 2013

Posted by on Oct 16, 2013 in Science Education and Policy | Comments Off on Mystery Political Science Theater 2013

In the wave of articles, blog posts and Tweets that are addressing the impact of the shutdown on science, no one has asked the obvious question: If the president care about science so much, why doesn't he care about science?

I have argued that science should be considered a strategic resource, no different than food and oil - yet the President who declared he was going to "restore science to its rightful place" has done nothing of the kind. 

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Green Energy CEO Predicts Demise Of His Competition

Posted by on Oct 14, 2013 in Energy | Comments Off on Green Energy CEO Predicts Demise Of His Competition

Jeremy Leggett, who runs the largest solar power installer in the UK, is celebrating the World Energy Congress in South Korea by selling you a book predicting the demise of his competitors in conventional energy companies.

Well, he is going to be right eventually. Though we supposedly hit Peak Oil in 1992, yet still haven't, the math says they can't be wrong forever. To make his case that fossil fuels are doomed sooner rather than later, he invokes the popular standby of people who want to sound science-y: the brain. 

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Jesus A Propaganda Campaign? Myth Of The Oppressed Underdog In The Humanities

Posted by on Oct 13, 2013 in Random Thoughts | Comments Off on Jesus A Propaganda Campaign? Myth Of The Oppressed Underdog In The Humanities

In the early parts of Dan Brown's "The DaVinci Code" he spends a great deal of time outlining how both art history (no, really) and his particular brand of religious revisionism are legitimate ... but repressed by Big Religion.

In science, we see that all of the time; X says he can invent perpetual motion or has overturned some aspect of medicine or biology and "dogma" keeps it hidden. It's the myth of the oppressed underdog. Americans love it, it's good reading, David vs. Goliath stuff. It is the story of how America came to be.

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Jesus A Propaganda Campaign? Myth Of The Oppressed Underdog In The Humanities

Posted by on Oct 13, 2013 in Anthropology | Comments Off on Jesus A Propaganda Campaign? Myth Of The Oppressed Underdog In The Humanities

In the early parts of Dan Brown's "The DaVinci Code" he spends a great deal of time outlining how both art history (no, really) and his particular brand of religious revisionism are legitimate ... but repressed by Big Religion.

In science, we see that all of the time; X says he can invent perpetual motion or has overturned some aspect of medicine or biology and "dogma" keeps it hidden. It's the myth of the oppressed underdog. Americans love it, it's good reading, David vs. Goliath stuff. It is the story of how America came to be.

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Math Takes On The Baseball Playoffs

Posted by on Oct 12, 2013 in Mathematics | Comments Off on Math Takes On The Baseball Playoffs

NJIT math professor Bruce Bukiet wrote an article here on his Markov process predictions for the baseball playoffs. That wasn't something new, he is in his 13th season of doing just that, often to maddening success.

How did he do this time? 

The Pirates didn't advance, the Cardinals are now facing the Dodgers, but otherwise he nailed it, with the Boston Red Sox and the Detroit Tigers getting ready to square off for the pennant. The math doesn't always work; last year his numbers said Detroit would win the World Series. Nope, Giants again, my gut beat reason and sanity.

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Math Takes On The Baseball Playoffs

Posted by on Oct 12, 2013 in Mathematics | Comments Off on Math Takes On The Baseball Playoffs

NJIT math professor Bruce Bukiet wrote an article here on his Markov process predictions for the baseball playoffs. That wasn't something new, he is in his 13th season of doing just that, often to maddening success.

How did he do this time? 

The Pirates didn't advance, the Cardinals are now facing the Dodgers, but otherwise he nailed it, with the Boston Red Sox and the Detroit Tigers getting ready to square off for the pennant. The math doesn't always work; last year his numbers said Detroit would win the World Series. Nope, Giants again, my gut beat reason and sanity.

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Phailin: Catastrophic Category 5 Storm Closes On India

Posted by on Oct 12, 2013 in Atmospheric | Comments Off on Phailin: Catastrophic Category 5 Storm Closes On India

Tropical Cyclone Phailin is closing on northeastern India and by morning will bring winds exceeding 100 miles per hour and a storm surge up to 20 feet. 

Windgusts near landfall could be 150 MPH. They were higher than that a few hours ago.

NASA would ordinarily provide details but while the administration has 83% of the government working during the budget negotiations, including 463 people just in the White House and a fully staffed Congressional gym, 97% of NASA and other science organizations are furloughed.

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The Government Shutdown Is Not Decreasing Food Safety

Posted by on Oct 11, 2013 in Public Health | Comments Off on The Government Shutdown Is Not Decreasing Food Safety

If you live in America and hadn't heard, the government is in a shutdown. We've had a full plate of political theater, with armed stand-offs at veteran's memorials and the National Zoo's Panda Cam going dark, presumably to convince us that government is funded on a daily basis - except for all those exempt and 'essential' employees, which number in the millions.

If you are asking, no, science is not considered essential to either party, that is why 97% of NASA is on vacation during this budget posturing.

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When It Comes To This Science, The Mid-East Is Ahead Of The US

Posted by on Oct 9, 2013 in Science and Society | Comments Off on When It Comes To This Science, The Mid-East Is Ahead Of The US

When you think about science leadership, you don't often think about United Arab Emirates. Dictatorships don't lend themselves to quality basic research but when they put their minds to applied research and development, and a lot of money, good things can happen.

While environmental activists wish we were a little more dictatorship-oriented when it comes to banning cars, like the Chinese did before the Olympics (for everyone but elites, anyway), plenty of scientists might like to have a more dictatorial, mission-based approach to research in the US, like we had with the Manhattan Project and the NASA Moon landing.

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