Sunday, 24 February 2008

creationevolution continuum




knowledge for sake of action



Knowledge for the Sake of Action - Science and Torah - Science Is Torah.

In my last few posts and comments on them, I proposed that most

secular study such as the sciences and most of the humanities are

necessary to get to Yediat Hashem - Knowledge of God - which is the

objective of humanity. Rambam often tells us that we learn Halacha to

know how to do the Mitzvot which help us perfect our personality and

thinking so that we can understand the sciences from a perspective

that will lead us to God. In this sense, the Mitzvot and the Halacha

that teaches us how to perform them are tools that precede and at best

are equal in importance with the necessary sciences. The most telling

statement is in MN 3:51 where he presents the allegory of the king

living in the inner chambers of the palace and his subjects looking to

find the way in. He places the Halachik authorities who have no

philosophic inclination in the courtyard circling the palace, together

with those who learn the basic laws of logic and Math.

"Those who arrive at the palace, but go round about it, are those who

devote themselves exclusively to the study of the practical law. They

believe traditionally in true principles of faith, and learn the

practical worship of God, but are not trained in philosophical

treatment of the principles of the Law, and do not endeavor to

establish the truth of their faith by proof... My son, so long as you

are engaged in studying the Mathematical Sciences and Logic, you

belong to those who go round about the palace in search of the gate."

He places the scientist who has no philosophical training in the

antechambers together with those who seek to understand the proofs for

God.

"Those who undertake to investigate the principles of religion have

come into the antechamber; and there is no doubt that these can also

be divided into different grades... If you however understood the

natural things you have entered the habitation and are walking in the

antechambers."

However, there is one additional point that is not accepted by all who

read Rambam but is to me clear like day. The objective is Yediat

Hashem but not for knowledge alone. Knowledge of God is equated with

Olam Haba and with the highest levels of experiential attachment to

God - Deveikut - and "Kiss of Death" - Mitat Neshikah. Knowledge of

God however is not the ultimate objective but a stepping-stone and has

as its own objective the emulation of God. When one knows God through

His actions and analyzes them properly, he can understand what God

wants from us and what our role is in the universe. That is the

meaning of the 13 attributes of God that we declaim as part of our

Teshuvah process.

"Our Sages call them Midot (qualities), and speak of the thirteen

Midot of God ... only the thirteen Midot are mentioned, because they

include those acts of God which refer to the creation and the

government of mankind, and to know these acts was the principal object

of the prayer of Moses." (MN 1:54)

In other words if man wants to perfect himself, in the process of

searching for God he has to meditate on God's action or attributes so

that he can emulate them. As Rambam states many times "good" is the

promotion of existence and continuity. When we say God is good by

definition, we are saying that He is the reason and First Cause for

existence. If we want to do "good", there is only one approach;

emulate God who is good by definition and do our part in promoting

existence and continuity.

After explaining in MN 3:54 that -

"The fourth kind of perfection is the true perfection of man: the

possession of the highest, intellectual faculties; the possession of

such notions which lead to true metaphysical opinions as regards God.

With this perfection, man has obtained his final object; it gives him

true human perfection; it remains to him alone; it gives him

immortality, and on its account, he is called man... And that the

religious acts prescribed by the Law, the various kinds of worship and

the moral principles which benefit all people in their social

intercourse with each other, do not constitute the ultimate aim of

man, nor can they be compared to it, for they are but preparations

leading to it."

Rambam makes the point that Knowledge is not enough.

"The prophet [Yirmyahu 9:22-23] does not content himself with

explaining that the knowledge of God is the highest kind of

perfection... The prophet thus, in conclusion, says, "For in these

things I delight, says the Lord," i.e., my object [in saying this] is

that you shall practice loving-kindness, judgment, and righteousness

in the earth. In a similar manner, we have shown (MN I: 54) that the

object of the enumeration of God's thirteen attributes is the lesson

that we should acquire similar attributes and act accordingly. The

object of the above passage is therefore to declare, that the

perfection, in which man can truly glory, is attained by him when he

has acquired--as far as this is possible for man--the knowledge of

God, the knowledge of His Providence, and of the manner in which it

influences His creatures in their production and continued existence.

Having acquired the knowledge he will then be determined always to

seek loving-kindness, judgment, and righteousness, and thus to imitate

the ways of God."

Clearly, Rambam does not stop at knowledge of God alone. Humanity's

objective is to figure out how to act appropriately and perform its

role in creation through knowledge. I believe that this point is the

most important idea in Rambam's thought and without it, we miss the

greatest insight he teaches us. Only the intellectually perfected man

can know what his role is in creation and act appropriately. That

person is represented by the prophet and Moshe the greatest and unique

prophet is the paradigm of such a human being. Moshe gave the world,

through the Jewish people, the eternal Torah, the divine approach to

man's perfection. In practical terms, Judaism sees human knowledge as

a way of serving God by acting to fulfill His wish that each component

of the existence He created play its role in the continuity of His

creation.

The limits of human knowledge and the implications thereof will be the

subject of my next post.


oliver kamm



Oliver Kamm

I have been enjoying the blog of Oliver Kamm. Kamm is a true

rationalist. Most of my readers will be aware that people who call

themselves rationalists tend to be suffering from more delusions

than most. They have simply substituted what they took to be one

set of myths (usually religious) for another set (usually

reductionist and political). Kamm is far more clear-eyed. In fact,

the only illusion he allows himself is that he is a member of the

political left. And yet his main literary activity is to puncture

the bubbles that make up the worldview of certain members of

mainstream left.

For some of this group, to call yourself leftwing requires that you

hold to certain propositions. These include that America is to

blame for most of the world's problems, that the Soviet Union was a

glorious experiment that went wrong and that the Palestinians are

entirely innocent of the causes of their suffering. Economically,

you must be anti-globalisation, against free trade, in favour of

protectionism (which you call fair trade) and impatiently awaiting

the collapse of capitalism. On the domestic front, you must hate

Margaret Thatcher, laud the Trade Unions, believe that the

Argentine battle cruiser, the Belgrano, represented no threat to

the British fleet when it was sunk during the Falklands War and

blame the Middle Classes for everything that is wrong with the

British education system.

As far as I can gather, Kamm does not subscribe to any of these

propositions. Nor, I should hasten to add, do many people in the

Labour Government, which could be described as social democratic

but never as socialist. The Labour Party's activist base, on the

other hand, is well to the left of the leadership.

So Kamm is a liberal who delights in destroying the myths of the

left (and occasionally the far right too, although he restricts

himself to holocaust denial debunking in this respect). Anyone who

enjoys forensic prose coupled with high intelligence laced with a

Tabasco of arrogance will find his blog well worth perusing. He is

especially strong on the continuing legends of the Cold War,

especially those that seek to show a moral equivalence between the

democratic United States and the tyranny of the Soviet Union.

Like many other signatories of the Euston Manifesto, on one subject

he is quite misguided. As an atheist, he occasionally feels a need

to be rude about religion. This has also led him to praise the

recent books by Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens. I can

only assume that this is one area of study where he is not as well

briefed as he is in modern history and contemporary politics.

Consequently, he is unable to distinguish between useful

scholarship on the subject and the rhetoric that he despises in

other areas. Not that he would convert; but he should be aware that

the history and science of religious belief bears little

resemblance to Hitchens' and Dawkins' caricature. Sadly, I don't

think he would consider brushing up on theological questions would

be a valuable use of his time and so this flaw in his thinking is

likely to be maintained.

Click here to read the first chapter of God's Philosophers: How the

Medieval World Laid the Foundations of Modern Science absolutely

free.

: Posted by James : Permanent Link :

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frontiers of junk science global



Frontiers of Junk Science: Global warming snow job melting?

"According to a recent National Center for Policy Analysis report,

last year's declaration of impending doom from the UN

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in the form of its

Fourth Assessment Report was based on opinion instead of science. As

hard data continues to emerge, global warming becomes increasingly

difficult to defend. Hundreds of highly qualified scientists and

climatologists unrelated to the UN's IPCC pocket-science squad are

contesting the assumption of so-called "experts" that CO2 is the

primary force driving climate change. A number of scientists discount

the warming theory entirely. In fact, many believe that the globe may

be getting cooler--and some of them are putting their money where

their mouths are. Believing that the world will be cooler in ten

years, a pair of Russian scientists have even waged a $10,000 bet with

British climate "expert" and global-warming alarmist James Annan.

Meanwhile, China is battling its coldest winter in a century. Scores

of people are dead and millions are stranded. Will Leftmedia shills

report the events there with newfound skepticism for global warming?

Don't count on it."

-The Patriot Post

posted by HeavyHanded at 6:56 PM

1 Comments:

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I think that your blog

is best for free job posts

thanks........

By Blogger Manikandan, at 8:47 AM

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seven old men of science fiction




scienceciencia



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2006_10_01_archive



Are hard science fiction readers squeamish?

Science fiction author Chris Moriarty (most recent book: Spin Control)

has an essay on his web site about "hard" science fiction. He points

out that until recently some considered the biological sciences were

considered to be too "fantastic" to be science fiction. He speculates,

though, that perhaps part of the problem that the biosciences have had

in being accepted into the "hard science fiction" realm is that

descriptions of biology (particularly human biology) make some readers

uncomfortable.

Hard sf may be a broad field and getting broader daily -- I

remember when people said C. J. Cherry's Cyteen wasn't hard sf

because cloning was 'fantasy science' (5) -- but it will always be

a genre written by and for people who are passionate (albeit at

times foolishly passionate) about science and technology.

(5) Actually, I think there may be another, non-political factor

behind the longstanding reluctance to include stories based on

biology in the hard SF cannon. Part of it is a straightforward and

perfectly understandable aesthetic impulse; until the advent of

genetic engineering and mathematical biology, there was a truly

deplorable absence of equations in most biology texts, which made

biology-based sf stories a hard sell for the numerophilic hard-cord

hard SF fan. However, I can't quite buck the suspicion that part of

hard SF's historic biology phobia was mere squeamishness. The kind

of squeamishness so entertainingly encapsulated in the old Star

Trek episode, Amok Time, where Spock precedes a highly euphemistic

discussion of salmon spawning procedures with the shamefaced

admission that his illness "has to do with biology . . . Vulcan

biology."

Is that true? It certainly sounds plausible to me. I've certainly met

"engineering types" that are much happier in a simple universe made up

of numbers and circuits and metal than the fluids and squishiness of

the biological world.

Oh, and the dialog from Amok Time"? Here is a sample of the dialog

where Spock dances around the basics of Vulcan biology:

"There are precedents in nature, Captain... the giant eel-birds of

Regulus Five. Once each eleven years, they must return to the

caverns where they hatched. On your Earth, the salmon. They must

return to that one stream where they were born, to spawn - or die

in trying."

"But you're not a fish, Mr. Spock-"

"No - nor am I a man... I'm a Vulcan. I had hoped I would be spared

this, but the ancient drives are too strong. Eventually, they catch

up with us... and we are driven by forces we cannot control - to

return home, and take a wife... or die."

(pause) "I haven't heard a word you said - and I'll get you to

Vulcan, somehow."

- Spock and Kirk

It's silly dialog, but I suspect it was written as much to get around

television censorship of anything having to do with s-e-x as

squeamishness on the part of the writers and fans. I could be wrong,

of course, since Star Trek has a long history of really crappy

biology. (But happily for me, lots of blog fodder).


glow in dark kitties science silliniess



Glow-in-the-Dark Kitties: Science, Silliniess, or Just Plain Scary?

Through genetic manipulation, South Korean geneticists have been able

to not only "turn-on" the fluorescence protein in cat embryos, but

have also successfully cloned the animal.

A team of scientists led by Kong Il-keun, a cloning expert at

Gyeongsang National University, produced three cats possessing

altered fluorescence protein (RFP) genes, the Ministry of Science

and Technology said.

Source: South Koreans Clone Cats that Glow in the Dark

While the ability to glow-in-the-dark in and of itself isn't a

significant medical advancement, the ability to clone genetically

altered animals is. This is big news in the fledgling field of genetic

medicine, as it is now possible to create the ultimate control group

for testing: exact copies of animals afflicted with diseases that

humans suffer from (cats and humans share more than 200 of the same

afflictions).

Other applications of the technology:

* genetically engineering livestock that emit less methane

* cloning endangered species, slightly reconfigured to adapt to

altered or new habitats

* designer pets and flourescent foodstuffs

Some would argue that all of these possibilities raise important

ethical questions, but I would counter that the overall question of

whether or not genetic engineering is ethical has been settled since

humanity first started to selectively breed livestock, pets, and

produce; the rest is just details.

Consider what happened when transgenic artist Eduardo Kac commissioned

the engineered breeding of Alba, a glow-in-the-dark rabbit from French

geneticists. A firestorm of protest by animal rights activists who

dubbed the process "abusive" caused the French team to renege and keep

the animal rather than turn the rabbit over to Kac.

Whether or not living out her life in seclusion (Alba is not

accessible to the general public and whether or not the animal is

still alive is unknown) as a lab specimen has given Alba a better

quality of life than she would have had otherwise is a very poignant -

and, to date - unanswered question. Because Alba isn't accessible to

the public, whether or not she suffered any ill side effects from the

genetic manipulation that made her glow in the dark is also unknown.

Given that Kac intended the animal to be the family pet and to

showcase his family's relationship with the animal as a form of

artistic expression, my personal opinion is a resounding "no." While

it may well be true that the science used to create Alba could have

been better applied elsewhere, the effort expended to protest her

"abuse" would have been better spent protesting Kentucky Fried

Chicken, veal producers, or some other enterprise that engages in the


halloween posts



Halloween posts

It's been eons, but yes, I'm still alive -- just busy! Sorry for not

blogging for, well, three months, and thanks to those who emailed me

asking me to come back. I didn't even realize I had fans!

Over at Scientific American's 60 Second Science blog, I wrote a

festive Halloween post about the effects of costuming on human

behavior -- i.e., does Halloween make us go a little crazy? Check it

out here.

The site has another great Halloween post about what science says

about the supernatural. And you can probably guess what that is.


she blinded me with science



She blinded me... with science!

Excerpt from recent email from a friend:

... we were on the way back into the big mall complex proper [at

the Flatiron Mall in Denver, CO], passing by various stores in the

outdoor section. We were passing by a spa that I had barely

registered in my brain on the way to lunch--they had a dry erase

board with a listing of their services, such as Botox and facial

waxes. I forgot about it as soon as I passed it.

Well, *this* time, ____ pointed out an item midway down the board,

which said, "DNA STEM CELLS".

I stared at it, racking my brain for any recollection of salon stem

cell use, but came up dry. So I walked in, and asked the three

women of various ages, in lab coats, for more information. The

older of the trio, a middle-aged woman with wavy blonde hair, said,

"You have stem cells in your skin, and as you age, those stem cells

don't work as well. We replenish your stem cells using bovine stem

cells from amniotic fluid to rejuvenate the skin."

"... Bovine?"

"Yes, because they are the most similar, molecularly, to our own."

"Ah. .... and, um, how do you, uh, apply, these stem cells?"

"We massage them into the skin." (Demonstrating, waving her fingers

in circles around her face without quite touching the skin.)

"... So, you're saying that you ... replenish ... the stem cells

... by topical application?"

"Yes."

" ... I see. ... Yes. ... Thank you, have a nice day."

I left the spa and joined ____ outside, and walked a bit before

practically collapsing with laughter and trying to keep myself from

having an aneurysm. It would have been fun to delve deeper, just to

see (such as: how do you keep these stem cells? Exactly how do the

stem cells cross the epithelial barrier? What molecules, really,

are you talking about?), but I had stuff to do.

My friend, who is a developmental biologist, subsequently sent me a

link to Clinique Reneux's "CryoStem Skin Therapy(TM)" FAQ, which

contains much hilarity.

_________________________________________________________________

UPDATE: On further Googling, it appears that this scam is perpetrated

by "The DNA Health Institute" (warning: odious Flash page), a company

led by erstwhile homeopathic charlatan Noel Aguilar, "Ph.D.". "Dr."

Aguilar has evidently gotten tired of giving talks at Rotary Clubs and

writing "forwards" [sic.] for books on "magnetic healing". I would be

very interested to know where Noel Aguilar got his Ph.D., and in what

field, and what his thesis was. If he actually is a Ph.D., that means

his doctoral thesis is on file in some university library somewhere,

and you should be able to order a copy. [DEL: I suspect it would be

"interesting" reading --- in sociology, or English, or some other

field completely unrelated to cellular biology. :DEL]

Note, also, that the CryoStem literature suggests the treatment has

received FDA approval. However, a search through the FDA's catalog of

approved drugs for "cryostem", "cry", and "stem" reveal no hits ---

even though the claims made for CryoStem definitely meet the (B)

clause of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, section 201(g)(1)'s

standard for drugs: "articles (other than food) intended to affect the

structure or any function of the body of man or other animals". If

promoters of this drug are not simply lying outright, but merely

stretching the truth, then the most they could have done is submit

reports indicating that CryoStem meets the minimal safety requirements

for cosmetics, with no evaluation of efficacy. (Drugs must be both

safe and effective; cosmetics need only be safe, or carry a warning

label).

Incidentally, this all serves as further evidence for my working

hypothesis that only charlatans or the incredibly insecure actually

write "Ph.D." after their name, or call themselves "Dr." (unless they

are licensed, practicing medical doctors). Go to any top ten

university department in any field, and you'll find few people who do

either, except as a joke, or when they need to impress somebody

especially thickheaded (e.g., Congress).

_________________________________________________________________

UPDATE': In comments, Inky notes:

I looked at the Rotary Club link. It says that:

Today there is a Hahnemann Medical College of Homeopathy. Dr.

Aguilar attended, and earned a degree there.

...

Also: apparently the majority of homeopathic .. erm, instituions,

are either named after Hahnemann, the founder of homeopathic

quarkery. Otherwise, they conveniently put in "Homeopathy", like

the Canadian Academy of Homeopathy.

Thus, there is not just *one* Hahnemann Medical College of

Homeopathy. Locations gleaned from the first page of Google

searches include: Pennsylvania, Heikunst, New Delhi, and Bhopal. I

suppose Dr. Aguilar went to PA.

Also, a correspondent helpfully writes, via email:

According to _Dissertation Abstracts_, nobody named Noel Aguilar

has received a Ph.D. from an accredited North American institution

--- and their records go back to some point in the 1800s. In fact

there are only 140 Aguilars in their data base, which includes some

European schools (I don't know since when but at least since the

1990s), and none of them have names which could plausibly be

versions of Noel Aguilar, e.g., "N. Aguilar". So there are three

possibilities: (1) He got his degree abroad. (2) He got his degree

from a non-accredited institution. (3) He just made it up.

Therefore, I conclude that "Dr." Aguilar most likely got his "degree"

from a non-accredited school specializing in homeopathy.


2007_12_01_archive



It Seems I'm a Materialist (surprise, surprise)

What is Your World View?

created with QuizFarm.com

You scored as Materialist

Materialism stresses the essence of fundamental particles. Everything

that exists is purely physical matter and there is no special force

that holds life together. You believe that anything can be explained

by breaking it up into its pieces. i.e. the big picture can be

understood by its smaller elements.

Materialist

94%

Modernist

69%

Postmodernist

69%

Fundamentalist

44%

Existentialist

44%

Romanticist

25%

Cultural Creative


good book about creationism and



Good Book about Creationism and Science

I just finished reading Massimo Pigliucci's Denying Evolution:

Creationism, Scientism, and the Nature of Science. I highly recommend

this book as one of the best refuations of creationism out there.

Also, he gives a very nuanced view of what science can and can not

elucidate. While it won't change the minds of any die-hard

creationists, it is a good book for those on the fence (or those who

simply want to learn about science and evolution).

One point Massimo makes is that creationists are not stupid-this is

something many angry blue-staters seem to ignore. Rather, they are

biblical literalists and they fully understand the implications of

accepting (and denying) evolution. He concludes with the observation

that "Darwin has made a compelling case for scientists, but not yet

for the general public, that our species is neither the pinnacle of

creation nor the direct handcrafted job of a god....Perhaps in another

century or two, few people will find it strange to be the cousins of

chimpanzees and bonobos. Until then, we need to fight not in defense

of a particular theory, but for the privilege of attempting to

understand the universe."

It's going to be a long fight.

UPDATE: This morning, the Wall Street Journal published a story about

an evolutionary biologist who teaches at a fundamentalist college:

those experiences haven't stopped Prof. Colling -- who received a

Ph.D. in microbiology, chairs the biology department at Olivet

Nazarene and is himself a devout conservative Christian -- from coming

out swinging. In his new book, "Random Designer," he writes: "It pains

me to suggest that my religious brothers are telling falsehoods" when

they say evolutionary theory is "in crisis" and claim that there is

widespread skepticism about it among scientists. "Such statements are

blatantly untrue," he argues; "evolution has stood the test of time

and considerable scrutiny."

His is hardly the standard scientific defense of Darwin, however. His

central claim is that both the origin of life from a primordial goo of

nonliving chemicals, and the evolution of species according to the

processes of random mutation and natural selection, are "fully

compatible with the available scientific evidence and also

contemporary religious beliefs." In addition, as he bluntly told me,

"denying science makes us [Conservative Christians] look stupid."

Prof. Colling is one of a small number of conservative Christian

scholars who are trying to convince biblical literalists that Darwin's

theory of evolution is no more the work of the devil than is Newton's

theory of gravity....But Prof. Colling has another motivation. "People

should not feel they have to deny reality in order to experience their

faith," he says. He therefore offers a rendering of evolution fully

compatible with faith, including his own...

He finds a place for God in evolution by positing a "random designer"

who harnesses the laws of nature he created. "What the designer

designed is the random-design process," or Darwinian evolution, Prof.

Colling says. "God devised these natural laws, and uses evolution to

accomplish his goals." God is not in there with a divine screwdriver

and spare parts every time a new species or a wondrous biological

structure appears.

Unlike those who see evolution as an assault on faith, Prof. Colling

finds it strengthens his own. "A God who can harness the laws of

randomness and chaos, and create beauty and wonder and all of these

marvelous structures, is a lot more creative than fundamentalists give

him credit for," he told me. Creating the laws of physics and

chemistry that, over the eons, coaxed life from nonliving molecules is

something he finds just as awe inspiring as the idea that God

instantly and supernaturally created life from nonlife.

Prof. Colling reserves some of his sharpest barbs for intelligent

design, the idea that the intricate structures and processes in the

living world -- from exquisitely engineered flagella that propel

bacteria to the marvels of the human immune system -- can't be the

work of random chance and natural selection. Intelligent-design

advocates look at these sophisticated components of living things,

can't imagine how evolution could have produced them, and conclude

that only God could have.

That makes Prof. Colling see red. "When Christians insert God into the

gaps that science cannot explain -- in this case how wondrous

structures and forms of life came to be -- they set themselves up for

failure and even ridicule," he told me. "Soon -- and it's already

happening with the flagellum -- science is going to come along and

explain" how a seemingly miraculous bit of biological engineering in

fact could have evolved by Darwinian mechanisms. And that will leave

intelligent design backed into an ever-shrinking corner.

The Mad Biologist: I've never understood why Biblical literalism is

such an issue. Revelation may be divine, but the humans to whom

experienced revelation were not. Literalism posits that man hasn't

learned/discovered/had revealed anything in two millenia. If God had


basic science fix in virology



Basic science fix in virology

Lots of good on line resources compiled here. (Via Life Sciences


2007_09_01_archive



On Greed

Greed is one of the deadly vices in old-time Christianity. Not so much

in some of the newer interpretations seen among the fundamentalists in

the United States. I've read about churches where the sermons are all

about how Jesus will give the faithful more stuff in this life, too.

Does that remind you of the old Janis Joplin song about her asking God

for a Mercedes Benz and a color tv?

When did greed turn into a virtue? Probably quite a long time ago,

because capitalism does require it to be rehabilitated. But it's the

combination of greed and ignorance that has fueled the housing markets

crisis; greed mostly on the side of the sellers of loans and ignorance

mostly on the side of the buyers of loans, though not completely.

What IS greed? I'm sure there are good definitions to be found by the

click of the mouse, but I don't want to know what they are because

then this post would end right here. It's more fun to try to figure a

definition out of the pure air that floats inside my head.

The first aspect of my definition would be that greed doesn't really

apply to, say, a starving person's dreams about fantastically

excessive meals. That person is not being greedy; only starving. In a

similar vein, a poor person wanting to buy a modest house he or she

can't really afford is not greedy. Thus, wanting something very much

is not in itself a sign of greediness. We all have dreams and desires

and needs.

The second aspect then has to do with the inappropriateness of certain

dreams or desires. If you already have enough food and enough shelter

and so on but you still want more then you are probably greedy. Now,

this is not a definition from traditional economics course where a

consumer is always assumed to be on the road to ever higher levels of

consumption and only held back by the inevitable constraints of money

and time. But in reality people do sometimes sit down and say, in a

quiet and zen-like voice: "I have enough material possessions."

Note that the question of what is "enough" is not something easily

determined from the outside. But clearly one can have too many

cheesecakes and even too many Rolls-Royces. The sad part of greed is

that a genuinely greedy person will never be satisfied, by definition.

Perhaps that is what made the early Christians view greed as a vice:

it hurts.

How do greed and ignorance dance together, then? I pointed out those

two as the culprits in the housing market collapse. Ignorance in that

context has to do with three things: First, most mortgage-seekers have

very little understanding of interest rates and defaults and so on.

Those are hard topics to understand without some training. Second,

humans tend not to take the long view in general, and even less so

when times are hard right now, say. If you live in a crisis, you want

to struggle your way through that crisis and then think of the rest of

your life. But if life is nothing but a crisis after crisis, well, you

will live in the short-term by necessity. Focusing on the near future

makes things like balloon loans seem harmless, and an adjustable rate

mortgage something really helpful. But today turns into tomorrow and

so on, and suddenly you can't afford the new higher interest rates and

bankruptcy beckons.

Third, the mortgage lenders also suffer from ignorance. They may be

aware of their greed, at least some of them. But they may be ignorant

of the overall effects of their individual acts. It wouldn't matter if

one lender seduced borrowers into bad loans, but it does matter when

many, many lenders do that at the same time. The outcome is a lot of

people working in the lending industry losing their jobs.

If you watch commercials on television or ads on the net you know that

greed is encouraged every day of our lives. There is always a solution

to something that should bother you, and the solution is achievable by

just paying some money. It was only a few days ago that I learned I

could get a 500,000 dollar mortgage for less than a thousand a month!

Honest. Of course I didn't read the small print on the offer, and by

now the offer has disappeared into the Orwellian Memory Hole.

The short point of all these musings is that we have to decide how to

deal with greed. Is it the engine that drives the society? Or is it a

vice? And whose greed is it that matters here?

|

Posted by: echidne / 9/01/2007 03:51:00 PM

Stolen Hope Blogging And Some Saturday Echidne Musings

From Phila.

Did you ever see the Woody Allen movie called Zelig? It's a

mockumentary about a man named Zelig in the 1920s America who

supposedly had the ability to mirror the people he was with. Thus,

when he was among gypsies he turned into a gypsy. When he was among

psychiatrists, he started talking like one, and when he was next to a

fat man he also became fat. Except that he didn't do any of these very

convincingly.

I think my writing is like Zelig, always trying to bend itself to some

rules but never quite making it. That's why I like this here blog. No

writing rules, heh.


2006_09_01_archive



Cringely was Right!

Robert X. Cringely (host of PBS's NerdTV) wrote an interesting op-ed

piece in today's New York Times. In it he argues that when it comes to

designing rechargable batteries, consumer safety takes a back seat to

battery power. He explains how Sony (the manufacturer of the

lithium-ion batteries that have recently been recalled) knew about the

exploding potential, but charged ahead anyway. He shows how safety

standard used by industry, the M.T.B.F. (mean time between failure) is

a sham measurement that tells you nothing about the likelyhood that

your battery will explode.

However, industry is not the lone, uncaring villian here. They are

merely responding to market forces.

One might think that we'd be working on safer technologies, and we

are, up to a

point. Safer lithium-ion batteries are available, but computer and

mobile phone

manufacturers, now duking it out in a market based on talk time and

battery

life, have decided that we don't really need them. And judging from

the reckless

way we use these devices while driving cars, the manufacturers are

probably

correct about our risk tolerance.

This, to me, is just another example of why the libertarian think

tanks are wrong when they say that market forces will eventually lead

to better safety.

After reading that, I saw this little article over at ScienceDaily. It

talks all about a new advance in electrode technology for lithium-ion

batteries. It reviews the basic science of how a li-ion battery works

and then explains what the new technology does differently. It hypes

how the new technology will lead to batteries that hold more charge

and last longer.

And then at the very end, almost as an afterthought, it says:

There's an added bonus in that replacing a proportion of the cobalt

used in the

traditional lithium-cobalt-oxide electrodes with manganese improves

safety by

reducing the risk of overheating.


science as map of world



Science as a Map of the World

While the constructionist depiction of science as just one among many

crafts which man engages in is clearly extreme and absurd, the

principles which underlie such a claim cannot simply be swept under

the rug and ignored. Science, as well as scientific knowledge is a

largely man made construal of nature rather than some mirror of

reality which the scientists "unearth." Where the constructivists went

wrong is in not acknowledging the manner in which reality strongly

constrains such construals. Yes, we can only begin to reason about

reality once a contingent and corrigible classification scheme and

fundamental assumptions is in place, but this does not change the fact

that there is an objective reality which such schemes are about. While

there may be no one, True, God's-eye conceptual scheme available from

which to view this objective reality, the very fact that there is an

objective reality to which all conceptual schemes refer entails that

some conceptual schemes are better than others.

But what does "better" mean in this context? By "better" we simply

cannot mean "true", for truth, universality and knowledge are all

things that only makes sense within a conceptual scheme. There is no

meta-scheme in which one conceptual scheme can be defined as true in

any meaningful way. Thus, the problem of scientific knowledge as

platonic truth is three-fold:

1. We have no established method for discovering truth.

2. We have no way or recognizing truth when or if we do discover it.

3. Truth is a concept which is constructed rather than discovered.

In other words, we have no way of finding what truth is in the book of

nature, we have no way of recognizing truth even if we do happen to

find it in the book of nature, and worse still, there is no one, true

book of nature at all. The same can also be said for rationality,

objectivity, knowledge and science.

This, however, seems to leave the door wide open for an anything-goes

chaos in the realm of science. After all, how are we supposed to know

what is and is not science if there is no cosmic dictionary or

prewritten book of nature which can be consulted? Who gets to decide

what is and is not science, and how can we know if they are right? Why

is dark matter fair game in the science class room, but intelligent

design or even flat out young earth creationism not? These are not

easy questions to answer in a definitive manner.

The fact is that whether a theory is scientific or not is decided

primarily (exclusively?) by the scientific community itself. This

community does not arbitrarily grant the status of science to one

theory while withholding it from another equally "good" theory.

Rather, they ask questions concerning testability, falsifiability,

explanatory power, consistency, scope, etc.

What, in turn, justifies these criteria? Principle underlies the

principle of science? The answer is fertility. Does a theory work to

control and predict phenomena with greater consistency, accuracy and

scope? Does it raise workable problems? Fertility is what justifies

the scientific assumption that the natural world is a closed system as

well as methodological naturalism in general. Dark matter is

considered to be a potentially fertile theory and is thus accepted as

a scientific theory, while intelligent design is not.

Fertility, it should be noted, does not overcome the three-fold

barrier to truth which science faces, nor does it claim to. Fertility

does not establish one conceptual scheme as being true, nor does it

make the existence of such a scheme more plausible. Fertility, we have

seen, is not a reliable indicator of whether some theory is true or

not. Fertility is interpreted as a somewhat reliable path to truth,

although it is doubtful that such a metaphor even makes sense given

the other two barriers which science faces. Indeed, it would be more

accurate to say that fertility is seen as a reliable path to

fertility.

In this respect Philip Kitcher's metaphor of science as "mapping"

reality is convenient and compelling. A map is about the world, but no

map can ever be the one "true" map of the world, for such a map would

be the world itself. Thus, road maps, detail maps, oil field maps,

topological maps, whether maps, etc. are all different ways of

modeling or mapping the world, none of which can be said to be the

"true" map. Additionally, truths of the world, indeed, the very world

itself can only be encountered and described relative to the

assumptions and schematics which structure any given map. How good or

how fertile a map is, is determined in large part by what we want to

do with it, but even more so by the actual nature of the objective

world which the map is supposed to model.

Filed in: science

# posted by jeff g : 5:52:00 PM

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2007_01_01_archive



The Genetics of Magic

The year-end edition of the British Medical Journal always covers

topics that are typically overlooked in the biomedical literature

during the rest of the year. This year Sreeram V Ramagopalan and

colleagues have published a review of the literature* on the genetics

of magic, "Origins of magic: review of genetic and epigenetic

effects". Their conclusions:

Results Magic shows strong evidence of heritability, with familial

aggregation and concordance in twins. Evidence suggests magical

ability to be a quantitative trait. Specific magical skills,

notably being able to speak to snakes, predict the future, and

change hair colour, all seem heritable.

Conclusions A multilocus model with a dominant gene for magic might

exist, controlled epistatically by one or more loci, possibly

recessive in nature. Magical enhancers regulating gene expression

may be involved, combined with mutations at specific genes

implicated in speech and hair colour such as FOXP2 and MCR1.

They even propose a model of enhancer-driven gene regulation in

individuals displaying the magical ability phenotype:

Now, like all good modern journals, BMJ allows comments on their

articles (called "rapid responses" to make them sound less Live

Journally, I suppose). One of the commenters has an excellent

suggestion: a follow-up article on the heritability of Jedi powers. A

tough research project since it would require sitting through Episodes

I-III and reading the massive array related literature, but someone

should definitely do it!

* The literature in this case being the Harry Potter series of books


friday flash fiction white out



Friday Flash Fiction: White Out

Almost another disasterous no-show for me this week. I had a story

that I've been working on for a couple of days, and yesterday it was

finished. Until I had an inspiration last night of a way to improve

and expand the main character. So I added another 200 words today,

taking it close to the 1000 word limit. It's still flash fiction, but

much longer than I post most weeks. I'm not satisifed with it though.

The concept is almost brilliant, but I don't have time to do it

justice and it needs more work to get it right.

Fortunately I have another FFF idea that's been lurking for a couple

of weeks, so I dashed that one out in 300 words today. I'm quite

pleased with it, though a bit more time to polish would be nice;

that's the idea of FFF though, so here it is:

White Out

By Gareth D Jones

From nuclei created by their engineers, each warrior began work on

their own craft of crystal. They were warriors, but they were also

artists. They guided the crystal growths into marvellous and

intricate patterns, building fractal delights in the form of stars

and lace networks. Principles of engineering were not abandoned

however; despite their delicate appearance each craft could safely

hold a soldier and his armament.

Engineers wandered among the vast crowds of hard-working men,

checking for structural rigidity and aerodynamics. As the work drew

to close the Grand Marshal addressed the gathered horde, his voice

amplified by crystalline receptors.

"The world below is ripe for the taking!" he said. There were

cheers from near and far, echoing and re-echoing from the myriad

smooth surfaces. After a moment, quiet descended again.

"Weather conditions are perfect," the Marshal continued, "We will

not be detected." He paused to survey his men with great pride.

"Board your craft!"

Innumerable soldiers scrambled into their seats, cheering and

yelling encouragement to one another. The Chief Meteorologist

peered over the edge of their immense platform at the massed grey

clouds below. He nodded at the Marshal.

"Launch!" The Marshal commanded. Thousands of crystalline craft

fell from the platform and began their descent.

###

Nose pressed up against the damp, cold glass, Keeley stared hard

into the darkness outside. Pools of orange light from the street

lamps fought against the bitter cold in an attempt to make the

street look cheerful. Suddenly, something caught her eye, briefly

visible as it swirled from darkness to light and back into the

dark. She stared even harder for a moment, just to be sure, until

the lone swirl became a flurry.

"Daddy! Daddy!" she called over her shoulder, "Daddy! It's

snowing!"

The End


2005_12_01_archive



Circus of the Spineless

Circus of the Spineless #3 is up on Urban Dragon Hunters. All things

invertebrate, for your creepy-crawly pleasure...

posted by coturnix @ 9:50 PM | permalink | (0 comments) | Post a

Comment | permalink

What is Blogging All About

Colin McEnroe's blogging course up in Connecticut is coming close to

the end. Several of the students have really taken off with this, new

to them, form of communication. They are posting like mad, they are

commenting on each others' blogs, discovering cool other blogs and

websites, and I am sure they will continue blogging long after the

class is over. I urge you to go and look at the comments on the class

blog and follow the links on the sidebar to student blogs to see their

posts. They have built quite a little mini-community of their own,

with a number of us voyeurs in the bleachers.

For the last class (which, I am assuming, is convening tonight), they

spent some time figuring out what to discuss, as there was no

predetermined assignment. In the end, they want to talk about what

blogging is, where it is heading, and especially what is the meaning

of the word "personal" when applied to a blogger.

Elin of Nileblog compares blogging and writing: "But it feels good to

blog, because we get to express ourselves as fully and completely as

we want. And no one interrupts. Or walks away. Instead, we get to

write it, so it feels full and permanent (even if only in cyberspace).

I think that's a good thing." She initially defines 'personal" as

'intimate' and loves how easy it is to find like-minded people in the

blogosphere. She then makes an interesting comment about the bloggers

in the basements of their parents' homes on this post on her

classmate's blog Bill's Blither.

The Screamin' Memey has finally learned how to do the links properly,

although the photos still overlap each other. Has the class built its

own anthill in the swarm of the blogosphere?

Transgenderedtrash of Don't do the crime if you can't..... disagrees

it's a swarm and is being generally pessimistic about the future of

blogging.

Christopher Michael of Metablognition has a rare angle on the blogs -

how do they both reflect and affect the way we think and function.

Then, he points to an interesting study (PDF) about teen use of the

Internet (19% of online teens keep a blog and 38% read them) and adds

a couple more to bolster his case that blogs will have effects on teh

cognition of its users, especially on those growing up blogging.

Semper Gumby cuts through the noise and disagrees with all of his

classmates on the meaning of "personal".

Eric on Don't hate, prestidigitate is exploring blogs as journeys, as

well as the conflict between anonymity and community. Is each blog, or

blogosphere as a whole, trying to go somewhere? Perhaps travel from

anonymity to community?

Brett of Nonsense has taken to blogging perhaps more than any of his

classmates, spilling out the details of his dates, emotions, politics,

and everything else, so he may have a diffent take on what is

"personal". He's also figured out recently how to make his blog look

all nice and pretty with some technical know-how I don't have. Is the

journey really the emergence of personality?

John of Jean DuBlog thinks that blogging is changing the meaning of

the word 'personality' and there is a difference between changing

topics and changing voices.

Erin thinks that there is a competition between online and offline

social life (and she failed to post het Friday Cat Photo). And she

points out that someone in that class discovered this article that

argues that posting a Friday Cat photo helps your readers remember

your blog better (so they''ll come back).

I hope they post some more after class meeting tonight, post their

final papers online for all of us to read, and I also hope they all

keep blogging.

Update: They had their class and some have added new posts:

Screamin' memey disagrees with Mark (transgendertrash).

Eric podcasts his final thoughts.

Shante of Blogging For Beginners added three quick posts in a row: No

one is alone, truly, Why lack of anonymity has ruined my love life and

some more on the personal....

Matthew of Perpetual Perpetuity started his blog as a kind of a time

capsule. It is maddening that some of the students have additional,

'personal' blogs that I cannot find and read...

JP of A Novice Blogger's Thoughts posts the first initial reaction. I

hope more is coming...

Finally, Colin, on his personal blog, nails the whole "personal"

thing.

posted by coturnix @ 9:51 AM | permalink | (2 comments) | Post a

Comment | permalink

Blog Against Racism Day

Today is the Blog Against Racism Day. You should write something on

the topic today and send a link to your post here.

As someone growing up in Eastern Europe I feel woefully unprepared by

life experiences to write about this topic. Actually, I have mentioned

race here only a couple of times, and have written only one post

specifically about it. I don't feel I should try to write again about

something I have not lived through or even thought through

sufficiently to be able to avoid all the potential pitfalls. So, just


science du jour



Science du jour...

NYT has this article on the "science of services", whatever that

means.

An ex-colleague of mine wonders: why is this article in the Business

section of NYT?

I won't whine (in this post, anyway) about why this is not a science,

but will merely lament NYT's lack of critical reporting: there's no

discussion of operations research, industrial engineering, "management

science", and other mathematical/engineering/business school

disciplines (sciences and non-sciences) that subsume this field of

deep scientific inquiry many times over.


god inc sold to scifi channel



GOD Inc. sold to the SciFi channel!

I've previously posted videos by Mr. Deity. Another YouTube series of

the same genre that I've been a big fan of is God Inc. The premise is

that God runs his affairs just like a typical bureaucratic company,

with all the petty bickering and office politics.

The good news is that it's been picked up by the SciFi channel.


taking christ out of christmas



Taking the Christ out of Christmas

Philadelphia Weekly has an article about the local atheist movement

here in Philly.

Philadelphia's atheist story has a cast of characters that wouldn't

look out of place in a Robert Rodriguez movie scripted by a

resurrected Tennessee Williams. We will meet a large-breasted

exotic dancer and atheist intellectual who loves watching the

Christians she debates try to maintain eye contact (check out

Kelly's blog here -- JP). And a little girl who, while the adults

upstairs are holding a seance, bangs on the basement ceiling with a

broom and flashes the lights on and off by removing and replacing

the fuses (check out Margaret's homepage here -- JP). We'll meet

right-wing libertarians and left-wing liberals, woolly agnostics

and hardcore "nontheists," students, professors of philosophy, moms

and dads and YouTubing, blasphemous T-shirt-wearing punk rock

troublemakers. The only things they've all got in common are: a)

they don't believe in God (or Santa or the Flying Spaghetti

Monster) and b) they're your neighbors.

The article talks mostly about Margaret, the Tree of Knowledge, and

the RRS, but mentions other Philly atheist groups.

In Philadelphia alone there's the Freethought Society, the Humanist

Association of Greater Philadelphia, the Ethical Society, the

Philadelphia Association for Critical Thinking, the 100-member

First Church of Atheism and a bunch of internationally known

troublemakers who call themselves the Rational Response Squad

(RRS).

Just don't assume they all get along. Hang out with atheists long

enough, and you'll hear agnostics referred to as "idiot atheists"

and "chickenshit fence-sitters."

The author, Steven Wells, even mentions my local meet-up group.

The atheists of the Philadelphia Atheists Meetup Group, meeting in

the Cos� on 12th and Walnut in late November, might be mistaken at

first glance for anarchists or some other species of modern urban

troublemaker. They have a look of healthily dissatisfied,

computer-savvy malevolence about them. They look like they probably

don't spend too long coordinating their wardrobes.

I'm sure that last dig was aimed at me since he was giving me dirty

looks when he interviewed me (just kidding, he was very professional).

The article is well worth reading, but I need to post two more quotes

from it because they show why it's important for these (our) groups to

be around and what we're still up against. One quote is about sabotage

done to the Tree of Knowledge and the other is about the absence of a

certain founding father here in the cradle of American liberty.

In the coming weeks the tree of knowledge will be repeatedly

vandalized. One creative soul will remove all the restraining ropes

on one side, presumably so the tree will topple into the nativity

scene in the first high wind.

Philadelphia's Thomas Paine--the revolution's great

propagandist--wrote Common Sense, a blistering attack on the

absurdity of regarding the Bible as anything other than bad history

on great drugs. For this sin of intellectual honesty he was

physically and verbally assaulted, libeled, slandered and, but for

the efforts of America's atheists and freethinkers, would've been

written out of American history entirely. To this day, thanks to

Christian opposition, there's no statue of Paine in Philadelphia.


science fiction work in progress



Science Fiction/ What ever happened to Stuie Steinkritz ?

CLICK ON IMAGES TO ENLARGE

I do not know for certain that each and every one of this group are

for science fiction collectors.The Algot Erikson bookplate was done in

Sweden in 1940 .The Vepstas bookplate has a comic book theme.It was

designed by Henrietta Vepstas for her brother.The Morehouse bookplate

amuses me so I included it.

The Sallume plate was designed for Antioch Bookplate by Ed Emsh.

I do not know if Ray Bradbury uses a bookplate in his own books.When I

wrote to him in 2001 and asked him to send me his own bookplate , this

is what he sent.I have a very special fondness for Ray Bradbury as he

was the very first Science fiction writer I recall reading.Taking a

trip down memory lane I also recall a fellow student in my public

school in Brooklyn, whose name was Stuart Steinkritz ? He was, as I

recall a nephew of Leslie Nielson , the actor. Using a pen name, he

actually got published in one of the Science Fiction pulp magazines.I

think that's pretty impressive for a 12 year old.

Although I can't be sure about the exact spelling of his last name I

do recall the acronym he taught me B.E. M. (Bugged Eyed Monsters)

The late John Brunner used a bookplate designed by Jim Barker.The

designer's name is hard to make out but you can click on the image for

enlargement. Porcupine books in England

websales@porcupine.demon.co.uk has a number of books from Mr.

Brunner's library with his bookplate, priced at $20.00 + They are nice

people to deal with.

Edgar Rice Burroughs' bookplate does not come up for sale very

often.About ten years ago, I tracked down his grandson and was able to

purchase my copy from him. If a copy is offered to you from a

reputable source, buy it.

Arthur C. Clarke's bookplates show up from time to time on Ebay. They

seem to sell in the $25.00 + range.

L.Sprague de Camp used this very distinctive triangular bookplate.I

purchased it from Tom Boss, a bookseller in Wellesley , Mass. several

years ago.He may possibly have more copies.

Harlan Ellison uses a bookplate printed at Gnome press from a design

by Ed Cartier.The late Andre Norton used a similar bookplate.

H.P.Lovecraft- A word of caution if offered an association copy with a

Lovecraft bookplate. Mr. Lovecraft's cousin ,Wilfred B. Talman

originally designed the bookplate. Several years ago The Necronomicon

Press reproduced the plate and distributed it.I see them from time to

time on Ebay. There is no easy way that I know of to distinguish these

reproductions from the originals. Let the buyer beware.

CLICK ON IMAGES TO ENLARGE

It is Monday February 5th. I had hoped to complete this posting

yesterday but real life interfered. I want to thank all of you who

participated in my Ebay bookplate auction.The bidding was frantic and

24 of the 25 items listed were sold. I think this blog contributed to

the many new bidders who participated. I plan to have my next

bookplate auction sometime in March.If you would like to be notified

just send me an Email :

Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com

H.G.Wells- He had at least two bookplates.The one he definitely used

is item #44 in London Bookplates by Brian North Lee "From the library

of H.G.Wells at 13 Hanover Terrace Regent's Park London (with

facsimile signature). Label within an ornamental border"

The one illustrated above is from my collection and was designed by

Robert Saldo. I do not know is whether the Saldo plate was ever

affixed to any books in H.G. Wells' library.Some bookplate designers

created "honorarium " plates without the knowledge or consent of the

owner. It gave them a certain amount of prestige to claim they had

designed a bookplate for a well known person. As can be seen from the

Saldo advertisement, he promoted the fact that several celebrities of

the 1930's were his clients.

A final note-This has nothing to do with the science fiction theme.

Quite by chance I discovered several interesting bookplate groups on

the Flickr photo sharing site.If you click on the words Science

Fiction in the title, at the beginning of this posting it will lead

you to the Flickr search engine.


2005_02_01_archive



Fun Science Etc.

I just had to steal


2007_08_01_archive




wired science



Wired Science...

What's inside with Chris Hardwick (MTV's Singled Out, anyone) and

Rainn Wilson (Duh, The Office). This is some PBS show, strange and

interesting at the same time. Can you guess the mystery product?

[3x7swa]

Join the Blog Rush.


key stats on stem from nsb



Key Stats on STEM from NSB

"Students from financially poorer families or whose mother had less

formal education entered kindergarten with lower levels of mathematics

skills," according to the National Science Board's (NSB) Science and

Engineering Indicators 2008. This is one of many STEM

education-related observations in NSB's most recent Indicators

publication, released this week. The publication is meant to lay out

the "data and trends" within science, engineering, and technology, on

a biennial basis. Each publication includes a separate companion piece

that offers the Board's perspective on the policy implications of that

year's Indicators (all of these materials are available for free

online: the full Indicators here, the brief companion piece on policy

here, and a "Digest" summary of key statistics from the Indicators

here). The companion piece includes three policy recommendations:

enhancing Federal funding of basic research; encouraging greater

"intellectual exchange" between academia and the business sector; and

developing new data to track the economic effects of globalization.

Though issues related to these recommendations were the most salient

points in NSB's unveiling of the Indicators, there was a story behind

the story for the STEM education community.

Below, we will list some selected high and low points of that story,

all of which are direct quotes from the publication, unless otherwise

noted. The statistics generally come from the "highlights" section of

chapter one of the Indicators (pages 1-4 to 1-6), but will be cited

when drawn from another section, or from the Digest. Please visit

chapter one, titled "Elementary and Secondary Education," for more

complete information. The sections below are broken into the following

categories (all taken directly from the text), and within each

category there are subheadings which are italicized:

-Student Learning in Mathematics and Science

-Standards and Coursetaking

-Mathematics and Science Teacher Quality

-Professional Development of Mathematics and Science Teachers

-Teacher Salaries, Working Conditions, and Job Satisfaction

-Transitions to Higher Education

______________________________________________________________________

Student Learning in Mathematics and Science

All student groups made gains in mathematics and science during

elementary and high school, but performance disparities were evident,

and some gaps widened as students progressed through school.

Students from financially poorer families or whose mother had less

formal education entered kindergarten with lower levels of mathematics

skills and knowledge than their more advantaged peers. Substantial

racial/ethnic gaps in mathematics performance were also observed.

In 2005, U.S. fourth and eighth grade students outperformed those

tested in the 1990s in mathematics, and fourth grade students improved

in science.

Widespread increases in mathematics from the 1990s to 2005 were not

matched in science. Since 1996, the first year the current national

science assessment was given, average science scores increased for 4th

graders, held steady for 8th graders, and declined for 12th graders.

Standards and Coursetaking

In 2006, slightly more than half the states required 3 or more years

of both mathematics and science courses for high school graduation.

Students in more than 40 states were required to complete at least 2

years of both mathematics and science in high school; 3 years was the

most common requirement for both subjects, in effect in just over half

the states.

State development of course content standards has progressed in recent

years and standards continue to be reviewed and revised.

All states had issued content standards in mathematics and science by

2006-07, and 35 states had schedules for reviewing and revising those

standards.

Trends from 1990 to 2005 show increases in advanced coursetaking;

growth was especially strong in mathematics.

Class of 2005 graduates completed mathematics courses at far higher

rates than their 1990 counterparts in all categories except

trigonometry/algebra III.

As the school's poverty rate diminished [i.e., as income level

increased], [high school] graduates were more likely to complete many

of the advanced mathematics, science, and engineering courses [e.g.,

only 16.8% of students in schools with a high poverty rate completed

trigonometry or algebra III, versus 26.2% in schools with a very low

poverty rate; similarly, only 49.6% in high poverty rate schools

completed chemistry, whereas 67% completed chemistry in low poverty

rate schools; see tables 1-9 and 1-10 below for more details]. For

some subjects, a significant different existed only between schools

with very low poverty rates and all other schools (Indicators, page

1-23).

Mathematics and Science Teacher Quality

Most mathematics and science teachers have the basic teaching

qualifications of a college degree and full state certification.

At least 75% of 2003 mathematics and science teachers with less than 5

years of teaching experience participated in practice teaching before

their first teaching job.

The majority of public high school mathematics and science teachers

had a college major or certification in their subject field, that is,

they were "in-field" teachers. Infield teaching was less common in

middle schools than in high schools.

In 2003, 78%-92% of mathematics, biology, and physical science

teachers in public high schools were teaching in field. Out-of-field

teachers (that is, teachers teaching their subject with neither a

major nor certification in the subject matter field, a related field,

or general education) ranged from 2% of physical science teachers to

8% of mathematics teachers.

The proportion of in-field mathematics and science teachers in middle

schools was lower (33%-55%) than in high schools (78%-92%). About

3%-10% were teaching out of field.

Teachers in schools with low concentrations of minority and low-income

students tended to have more education, better preparation and

qualifications, and more experience than teachers in schools with high

concentrations of such students.

Mathematics and science teachers in low-minority and low-poverty

schools were more likely than their colleagues in high-minority and

high-poverty schools to have a master's or higher degree and to hold

full certification.

Mathematics and science teachers in low-minority and low-poverty

schools were more likely to teach in field than their colleagues in

high-minority and high-poverty schools.

New mathematics and science teachers (those with 3 or fewer years of

teaching experience) were more prevalent in high-minority and

high-poverty schools than in low minority and low-poverty schools.

Professional Development of Mathematics and Science Teachers

Participation in induction and mentoring programs was widespread.

In 2003, 68%-72% of beginning mathematics and science teachers in

public middle and high schools reported that they had participated in

a formal teacher induction program or had worked closely with a mentor

teacher during their first year of teaching.

Teacher participation in professional development was common. However,

various features of professional development identified as being

effective in bringing about changes in teaching practices were not

widespread.

Teacher Salaries, Working Conditions, and Job Satisfaction

Attrition from teaching was typically lower than from other

professions and attrition rates of mathematics and science teachers

were no greater than the overall rate. Many were satisfied with being

teachers and planned to stay in the profession as long as they could.

In 2003, 90% of mathematics and science teachers said that they were

satisfied with being teachers in their schools, 76% planned to remain

in teaching as long as they could or until retirement, and more than

66% expressed their willingness to become teachers again if they

could start over.

In academic year 2003-04, about 59% of the public secondary schools in

the United States reported vacancies in mathematics teaching

positions, and of these nearly one-third said that they found it "very

difficult to" or "could not" fill those vacancies (Digest, page 19).

About one-third of public secondary schools with vacancies in

mathematics [32%] or physical sciences [31%] reported great difficulty

in finding teachers to fill openings in these fields, whereas 22% of

schools reported that this was the case in biology/life sciences

[similarly, 31% in ESL, 32% in foreign language, and 31% in special

education] (Digest, page 19).

Science and mathematics teacher salaries continue to lag behind

salaries for individuals working in comparable professions and the

gaps have widened substantially in recent years.

In 2003, the median salary for full-time high school mathematics and

science teachers was $43,000, lower than the salaries of professionals

with comparable educational backgrounds such as computer systems

analysts, engineers, accountants or financial specialists, and

protective

service workers ($50,000-$72,000). From 1993 to 2003, full-time high

school mathematics and science teachers had a real salary gain of 8%,

compared with increases of 21%-29% for computer systems analysts,

accountants or financial specialists, and engineers.

In 2003, 53% of public middle and high school mathematics and science

teachers said that they were not satisfied with their salaries.

Transitions to Higher Education

Over two-thirds of all U.S. high school graduates enroll in

postsecondary education immediately after graduation, although

immediate enrollment rates for low-income families are lower (Digest,

page 18).

Between 1975 and 2005, the percentage of students ages 16 to 24

enrolling in college immediately following high school graduation rose

from 51 to 69%, with increases evident across all income levels

(Digest, page 18).

Over 80% of high school graduates from high-income families attend

college immediately after graduation, compared with 54% from

low-income families (Digest, page 18).

______________________________________________________________________

Science and Engineering Indicators, Chapter 1, Appendix Table 1-9

*Click to enlarge.

Science and Engineering Indicators, Chapter 1, Appendix Table 1-10

*Click to enlarge.

Labels: nsb, science and engineering indicators

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2007_02_01_archive



Death, Taxes, and Grad School

One of the many differences between me and my friends who got "real

jobs" after college is how Uncle Sam (and his state- and city-level

brethren) decide we should be classified in the tax code. Since it's

getting to be that time of year again, I figured I'd try to relate

some of the confusion I've experienced because of the

non-intuitive-ness of it all.

Back in high school and college, I got a W-2 at the end of the year

for any job I held, listing how much had been withheld from my

paycheck for federal and state tax, etc. All it took to do my taxes

(and get my refund!) was the aptly named 1040-EZ.

In grad school, I was lucky enough to be awarded a fellowship. There

is a difference in the way the federal government regards the various

forms of grad-student income.

Princeton required me to TA for one semester, and that year I had a

combination of fellowship and salaried income, so I remember that mess

particularly fondly.

Permit me to explain:

If you're TA'ing a class (or, as Princeton calls it, acting as an AI

or a preceptor), that is considered salaried work, so you still

receive a W-2 and have federal and state taxes withheld. There is no

money withheld from fellowship income at Princeton. (Is this different

anyplace else?) That means I don't get a W-2.

Instead of the 1040-EZ, I have to use the tax tables to estimate what

my tax will be for the coming year and send in a stub with a check to

the U.S. Treasury quarterly. Then, I have to use a 1040-A form to

report my estimated payments and deduct that from my calculated tax.

There's a fine if you don't pay a certain amount of estimated tax in

advance, so that's why I don't just pay up in one chunk on April 15th.

The state-level taxes have the potential to add another layer of

complexity, but I've been lucky because fellowship stipends are not

taxable in the state of NJ, so I'd always get a little bit of a refund

there. I grew up in NJ, so I didn't bother changing my residency or

anything, either. (Now that I live in PA, I need to look into whether

I'll owe tax at state level). City-dwelling grad students, how

complicated is the tax situation for you?

Just for kicks, I'll link to Princeton's tax requirement sheet. I

don't think you need to have an on-campus IP address to access it.

You always hear tell of random grad students who don't pay their

taxes, figuring that it isn't worth the government's time to audit

someone who only makes 19K a year. Good luck with that. I don't have


zombies in orange jumpsuits



Zombies in orange jumpsuits!

Who knew that Filipino prisoners could dance like that?

They also do a version of Hail holy queen from Sister Act (but I like

the zombies better)


2006_03_01_archive



Indian Science Blogging

It appears that Scian Melt is running again. Issue #14 is up on Topix

of general interest.

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History Carnival

History Carnival #26 is up on World History Blog.

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New Carnival!

The inaugural Carnival of Biotechnology is up on Biotech Blog.

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Tar Heel Tavern - call for submissions

GingerRivers will be hosting the Tar Heel Tavern # 54.

The theme is grace. How do you define grace? Where do you find it?

What, or whom have you seen it in? This tavern will focus on grace, on

these questions. Write a poem, a short essay, send in a photograph

with a caption ~ whatever you choose. Post your entry on your blog.

Submit it to Tar Heel Tavern by sending an email with "Tar Heel

Tavern" in the subject field of your e-mail to: gingerivers AT yahoo

DOT com

Send: The name of your blog; The title of the post; The URL of your

post. Additional blurb about it is also a nice touch and may be used

to introduce your entry. Send the entries by Saturday 2/25 at 9PM and

the Tavern will be up on Sunday morning.

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Looking for Science on "Science And Politics"?

With so many miscellaneous posts here, sometimes I get asked where is

science on this blog and where is politics on this blog. Nobody digs

through the Archives of course, and with 1414 posts here, it is hard

to sift through all the carnivals, memes, quizzes, cartoons,

linkfests, blog-friend shout-outs, navel-gazing, meta-blogging etc.

Not to mention that Blogger does not automate categories, so I am

always 3-4 months behind in doing it manually.

The blogging gurus suggest that one should often link back to old

posts. I do that, actually, quite often, mostly in posts about

politics. I noticed that, when they moved to their new digs at SEED,

several science bloggers posted their lists of "best of" posts. I

found those lists very useful. I never dug through their archives so

this was an easy and quick way to get to know their older stuff.

I have recently compiled a list of "best of" political posts here, so

now I should do the same for science. This is an attempt at such a

"best of " list, putting together the best of science blogging both

from "Science And Politics" and from "Circadiana". I hope you find it

useful.

I often just report on new cool research with no commentary. Sometimes

I add a brief comment of my own:

Do We Also Taste Just Like Chicken?

Bipolar Disorders

Zebrafish Research at BU

Circadian Rhythm in Visual Sensitivity

Melanopsin

I Am Seeing Red

Beached Whale Recycling

Now this is some cool science!

How Period and Timeless Interact in Fruitflies

Circadian Rhythms, or Not, in Arctic Reindeer

Persistence In Perfusion

Ah, Zugunruhe!

Ants are amazing!

More often, I use the reports on new research to make connections to

the Big Picture, or to other areas of science or beyond:

Malaria and Melatonin: Co-evolution Around The Circadian Clock

Diversity of insect circadian clocks - the story of the Monarch

butterfly

Serotonin, Melatonin, Immunity and Cancer

Revenge of the Zombifying Wasp

Lithium, Circadian Clocks and Bipolar Disorder

Some hypotheses about a possible connection between malaria and

jet-lag

Penguins have to rush sex - 'quicky' is the new norm

Sometimes it is not new research, but blog posts, books, articles, or

some old historical stuff that prompts me to write a long post:

What Are Gonads For (Among Else)?

Evolution Project And A Truly Fair And Balanced Fox

Lysenko Gets A D-Minus On My Genetics Test

The Mighty Ant-Lion

Did A Virus Make You Smart?

Development of the human sleep patterns

Science of Fiction, or, why we still read Sherlock Holmes

Diurnal rhythm of alcohol metabolism

Circadian Clocks in Microorganisms

Lunar Rhythms in the Antlion

Circadian Rhythms in Human Mating

What is a 'natural' sleep pattern?

Clocks in Bacteria I: Synechococcus elongatus

Do sponges have circadian clocks?

Clocks in Bacteria II: Adaptive Function of Clocks in Cyanobacteria

Sometimes I even post my own hypotheses or even my own unpublished

data:

Does circadian clock regulate clutch-size in birds? A question of

appropriatness of the model animal.

Influence of Light Cycle on Dominance Status and Aggression in

Crayfish

Chossat's Effect in humans and other animals

I have no qualms about putting in my two cents in controversial areas

of science:

More On Female Orgasm

Does Tryptophan from turkey meat make you sleepy?

Sleep Schedules in Adolescents

More on Adolescent Sleep

Of course, science reporting in the media drives me crazy, sometimes

strongly enough to write about it:

Sixth Sense? Give Me A Break!

Sex On The Brain of the science reporters

I like to review whole lines of research in plain English:

(Non) Adaptive Function of Sleep

Bipolar? Avoid night shift

Clocks, Migration and the Effects of Global Warming

Seasonal Affective Disorder - The Basics

My most popular post ever, on all of my blogs, is this one, combining

the recent research, review of whole lines of research over the

decades, and social and personal relevance of such research:

Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Sleep

I have written several times on topics related to science education:

Teaching Scientific Method

Some Thoughts On Use Of Animals In Research And Teaching

Dr.Love-of-Strange, or How I Learned To Love The Malaria...

My first high-school teaching experience

Great Men, History of Science

Great Men, History Of Science, Take Two

Teaching Evolution Successfully

Teaching Biology To Adults

An attempt at communicating science to lay audience on a blog

Teaching Biology Lab - Week 1

Teaching Biology Lab - Week 2

Teaching Biology Lab - Week 3

When Should Schools Start in the morning?

Teaching Biology Lab - Week 4

I have reviewed some books:

Books: Collapse by Jared Diamond

Books: Biased Embryos and Evolution by Wallace Arthur

Tomasello - Part I

Tomasello - Part II

Books: Evolution's Rainbow by Joan Roughgarden

I have listed science-related books on occasion:

Holiday Reading: Science Books

Reading Recommendations: Books about Clocks and Sleep

Essential Science Fiction

What Is Lab Lit?

I have mused about the way science and Internet are connected:

Blogs and the Future of Science

Quorum Sensing and the Blogosphere as a Superorganism

Science BloggerCon?

Some bloggers bash Creationists every day. It's not my style, but I

could not resist taking a stab at it myself a few times:

Definition Of Theory As In Theory Of Evolution

Evolution/Creation Discussions on DailyKos

Why Creationists Need To Be Creationists

Do We Need An Anti-Creationist Think-Tank?

Creationism Is Just One Symptom Of Conservative Pathology

Reverend William Paley's Circadian Clock

On Bush' Endorsement of Intelligent Design Creationism

And Creationism is not the only pseudoscience I paid attention to:

What This Blog is NOT About: Biorhythms

I came here from Yugoslavia 15 years ago, but I still have one ear out

to the news from over there. Sometimes, they make news in science...or

pseudoscience, that warrant blogging about:

I Take This Personally

Saga Continues

Serbs Like Darwin After All

Darwin In Serbia, He Said, She Said

More On Darwin In Serbia

Astrology Academy in Serbia

A new meaning of 'having a buzz'

Anti-Darwinian Lunacy in America: View from Serbia

A Pyramid in Bosnia?

Update on the Pyramid in Bosnia

This was so long, I had to split it into four parts. I wrote it in

1999 so it is six years out of date and both science and the

philosophy of science have moved on since then, but it is well

referenced and it is an interesting snapshot of the Zeitgeist, as well

as the only time anyone put together heavy-duty history of science,

philosophy of science, evolutionary biology and chronobiology all in

one place:

What Would Darwin Do (WWDD)

WWDD1: Darwinian Method

WWDD2: Darwin On Time

WWDD3: Whence Clocks

WWDD4: Power of Darwinian Method

Circadiana is a science-teaching blog-to-be, so you can learn the

basics of chronobiology there:

What Is Chronobiology

Basic Concepts and Terms

Clock Evolution

On Methodology

Forty Five Years of Pittendrigh's Empirical Generalizations

Circadian Organization

To Entrain Or Not To Entrain, That Is The Question

Circadian Organization In Mammals

Circadian Organization in Non-Mammalian Vertebrates: Birds

Circadian Organization in Japanese Quail

Entrainment

Phase-Shifting Effects of Light

Constructing a Phase-Response Curve

Using The Phase Response Curve

Interpreting The Phase Response Curve

PRC Atlas

Short History of Clock Genetics

Seasonality

Photoperiodism - Models and Experimental Approaches

One of those posts, a simple, educational post with not great axe to

grind may actually be the most valuable one after all. Why? Because it

is a reference in a scientific paper! Do you know of any other blog

posts that have been cited in scientific literature?

Blog-post as a scientific reference

And of course, this blog being titled "Science And Politics",

sometimes I try to connect science and politics in various ways:

Political Brain

Political Brain No.2

Political Brain No.3

Candidates' Circadian Profiles

Early To Rise Early To Bed...

God, Genes and Conservatives

Genocentrism Aids Anti-Abortion

Lefty and Righty excesses of pseudo-science

Political Affiliation on Campus

Fear = Bad; Anger = Good

Should Republicans be allowed to have (or adopt) children?

I have collected links when more-or-less important events happened:

Size Does Matter, or Does It?

Penis Blogging Week Continued

One-stop shopping for blog responses to the NYT series on Intelligent

Design Creationism

It's Over in Dover

Darwin Day Blog Celebrations

I tried to teach Bart Simpson algebra seven years in a row...

I like giving shout-outs to my blog-friends, including science

bloggers, so here are a few link-fests:

Evolution/Creation Debate

Evolution of the Intelligent Blog Design

IDC Blog Craze

Evolution Today

Link-Love: Weekend Science Blogging

Link-Love: A little bit of science blogging

Link-Love: some more science blogging

Link-Love: science-blogs down the alphabet, Part III

Link-love: more Alphabet Soup of science blogs

Link-Love: science-blogs down the alphabet, Part V

Link-Love: Continuing with the Alphabet of Science Blogs

Link-Love: Continuing with the Alphabet of Science Blogs - Part VII

Link-Love: Science Blogs Qs and Rs

Link-Love: Continuing with the Alphabet of Science Blogs - Part IX

Link-love: Catching up with the shifty alphabet of science blogs

Or do you just want to look at pretty pictures of strange critters?

Monday Cool Insectivore Blogging

Coturnix- Japanese Quail

Cockroaches

Quail

I have hosted a number of science-related carnivals:

Tangled Bank #19

Tangled Bank #51

Circus of the Spineless #6

I And The Bird #19

Animalcules, Volume 1, Issue 4

Grand Rounds #47

Grand Rounds v.2 n.20

Skeptic's Circle #5

Skeptic's Circle #23

...and many more...

Finally, I have written personal posts that are science-related and

this one is my all-time favourite:

How To Become A Biologist

which also got published on LabLit.com as

How to become a biologist

See also some others:

I, Coturnix

Where Did My Son Get His Smarts?

From The Mouths Of Babes...

At The Science Fair

My Equestrian Past

39

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Tangled Bank

Oldies music edition of the Tangled Bank is up on Aetiology!

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How to frame the anti-choice movement

MJS on Corrente Wire has a great post, called Democratic Talking Point

Oracle Appears as Vaginal Schematic, that makes an interesting

suggestion - make the anti-women crowd squirm by talking bluntly about

vaginas, penises and other organs they rather not know exist.

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Obligatory Readings of the Day

Lots of them today:

A Change In The Wind: Largest Insect Epidemic in North American

History:

That's according to the Canadian Forest Service. Hat tip to the

Washington Post, for an excellent story about the spread of the

Mountain Pine Beetle, a tiny little critter that for eons has been

controlled by cold winters...but no longer.

"It's pretty gut-wrenching," said Allan Carroll, a research

scientist at the Pacific Forestry Centre in Victoria, whose studies

tracked a lock step between warmer winters and the spread of the

beetle. "People say climate change is something for our kids to

worry about. No. It's now."

Dr.Biobrain: God's Big Kick and Faith After Death.

Big Monkey, Helpy Chalk: A Qualified Defense of Standardized Testing

in Higher Education.

Archy: Beware of frozen mammoths - part 2: The admiral and the

mammoth.

Sean explains the way a computer solved a problem without running it

at all in: Quantum interrogation

Echidne and Amanda rip into John Tierney and he gets what he deserves.

Environmental Action Blog: Americans Will Support Gas Tax Increase

If...

I applaud every excuse to post a picture of Scarlett Johanssen, as in

Anatomically modern gentlemen prefer blondes on Archaeoblog. Update:

Here is another blonde cave-woman.

Global Warming, the only issue that is REALLY serious, as it is global

and long-term and irreversible, ranks dead last in a recent survey of

what the government should focus on: Matt Nisbett reports.

Everything made its way into science fiction. Even my old oft-repeated

harping that conservatives are hierarchical and liberals

individualistic. See Musical Perceptions: The evils of hierarchy. I'll

have to get some Octavia Butler stuff to read soon.

Mahablog has been on the roll lately. See Obliviousness on healthcare,

Rights, Facts, Comments and Kibble on abortion, and The Bush Policy

Flow Chart on Rovian politicking, among else.

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Carnival of Education

Carnival of Education #56 is up on The Education Wonks.

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2006 BlogAds blog survey

After the great success of the Blogads blogosphere surveys of 2004 and

2005, Henry Copeland of BlogAds is launching the new, 2006 survey. Go

here and answer some questions. (For Question #23 put "Science And

Politics" if you want)

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Quotes on Counting

Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that

counts can be counted.

- Albert Einstein, 1879 - 1955

Anyone can count the seeds in an apple, but only God can count the

number of apples in a seed.

- Dr. Robert H. Schuller

The hardest arithmetic to master is that which enables us to count our

blessings.

- Eric Hoffer, 1902 - 1983

It's not the quantity, but the quality of friendships that counts.

That's the difference between 'counting off' and 'counting on.'

- Jimmy Tom

People who count their chickens before they are hatched, act very

wisely, because chickens run about so absurdly that it is impossible

to count them accurately.

- Oscar Wilde, 1854 - 1900

If you can count your money, you don't have a billion dollars.

- Jean Paul Getty, 1892 - 1976

From Quotes of the Day

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Carnival of the Liberals

[sm394514.png]

Want this badge?

Carnival of the Liberals #7 has been posted at Throw Away Your TV.

Jeff has done an outstanding job with the usual eclectic, informative

and witty selection of quality liberal blogging but has added his own

special twist. Throw Away Your TV is a video blog and as such Jeff has

gone out of his way to choose a video quickclip to highlight every

post in this edition. The video clips are often times funny, sometimes