Archive for April 11th, 2008

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Why Religion is More Popular Than Science

Friday, April 11th, 2008

Religion has FREE FOOD:


Free Food at the New Life Church

Free Food at the New Life Church

One of the local Elizabeth City churches gives out free dinners every night of the week. This is a fantastic community service, crucial for our impoverished small town. This isn’t just good works, it’s good business.

Of course, it was science that refined the agriculture, making it productive enough to feed our planet’s population explosion. It’s science that makes sure the food is safe to eat. It’s science that built the complex technological infrastructure to deliver the food hundreds of miles at incredibly low cost.

When I explained this to a religious member of the local community, she replied, “I am grateful for science, and I am grateful for god making science.”

Science needs to open a soup kitchen.

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Otherness

Friday, April 11th, 2008

Alien… Weird… Foreign… Alterity… Strange… Xeno… Other.

Scientists and philosophers have had a field day with the issues raised by communicating with aliens. Consider the Problems of Interplanetary and Interstellar Trade. When we finally do meet the aliens, at least we can rest assured that they’ll speak geek.

Nothing compares to the otherness found in science fiction. Even when artists take existing structures found on Earth, and simply add another layer of complexity to them, the result is remarkable, as we can see in these two videos by 1stAveMachine, where insects and jungle plants are made alien by simply adding additional organs to them:



And another:



Wayne Barlowe creates some of the most alien creatures of all, and makes them all the more real with hard SF details. There is some concept art that was used in making the CGI speculative documentary Alien Planet, about robot probes visiting a distant planet called Darwin IV, where life is detected in the future. Barlowe also has several great books collecting aliens from SF literature, which could make for interesting coffee-table books.

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Science Etcetera Venusday, 20080411

Friday, April 11th, 2008
  • A geometrically elegant recipe for making Sierpinski Cookies

  • Sierpinski Cookies

    Sierpinski Cookies
  • Why pricing things at $19.95 works on us.
  • The Olympic Torch emits 5,500 Tons of CO2.
  • I’m sure there’s no conflict of interest in The New Republic letting British Petroleum run a blog on Energy and the Environment.
  • Finally! A study on the habits of blog readers.
  • As food prices go up, farmers are abandoning farming subsidies that promote environmentally friendly agriculture.
  • Story of a man who had his genetic identity stolen and his fight to get it back.
  • The first animal on Earth wasn’t the simple sponge, but the suprisingly complex comb jelly.

  • Comb Jelly

    Comb Jelly
    Photo by Bastique
  • Creationism takes another sneaky step toward being taught in Florida schools.
  • Mary Roach’s book Bonk explores the science of sex.
  • A bill to make hybrid vehicles noisy to protect blind people is being introduced to Congress.
  • Chinese dyslexia is caused by different brain functions than English dyslexia.
  • Most powerful laser ever.
  • These hi-resolution photos of Mars’ moon Phobos are out of this world!!! (HT Clint)

  • Phobos

    Phobos
    Photo by HiRISE
  • Fish have noisy mating calls that can be heard on land. link to audio of fish
  • One fifth of scientists take cognitive performance-enhancing drugs, and 70 percent said they would.
  • The black hole at the center of our Milky Way is currently dormant, but a recent survey of neighbor galaxies have revealed active black holes where there shouldn’t be. Could our black hole become active again and fry us with gamma and x-rays?
  • The Expelled movie plagerized the Life of a Cell video.
  • I can’t figure out what this video is about. I think it’s putting down scientists, but it kinda makes me proud. Still, it’s not as cool as MC Hawking’s What We Need More of Is Science (free MP3).: