Phylopic Phryday Photo

Phylopic Phryday Photo

Hallucigenia by Caleb M. Brown

Reinventing the Wheel, Again

What happens when someone who reads Nietzsche also reads science and technology policy documents? Click on the link to see one answer.

Gay Rights Rally Is Attacked in Georgia – NYTimes.com

“We are trying to protect our orthodoxy, not to let anyone to wipe their feet on our faith,” said Manana Okhanashvili. “We must not allow them to have a gay demonstration here.”

via Gay Rights Rally Is Attacked in Georgia – NYTimes.com.

I have a few things to say about this. First, shame on all of y’all (including myself) who assumed this was the state of Georgia, USA.

Second, people who use religion as justification for hate ought to rethink the whole thing. Really, you have no sense of shame, so shame on you for that.

Finally, I actually redacted the quote, above, from the NT Times. Here it is in its entirety, with the part I previously omitted in bold:

“We are trying to protect our orthodoxy, not to let anyone to wipe their feet on our faith,” said Manana Okhanashvili, in a head scarf and long skirt. “We must not allow them to have a gay demonstration here.”

Now, what conclusion are we supposed to draw from that snippet? That Manana Okhanashvili is a religious zealot? I think we got that from the words and actions. Let’s stop feeding into stereotypes by judging people by the clothes they wear, ok, NYT? Or did I misunderstand the true necessity of that bit of detail?

Fracking policy

Comments now open on proposed policy to allow more fracking on public lands.

The Science of Stretch | The Scientist Magazine®

Cool read.

The Science of Stretch | The Scientist Magazine®.

The cicada and David Bowie – not such strange bedfellows | Environment | guardian.co.uk

Pretty funny:

The cicada and David Bowie – not such strange bedfellows | Environment | guardian.co.uk.

Dawn of the Intelligent Machines?

Good read via Andy Miah. Singularly good … or is it?

Vic Grout's avatarTuring's Radiator

(The second of two posts distilled from a talk given at the 2011 Wrexham Science Festival. The first part, ‘The Singularity is Coming … Or Is It?‘, appears separately.  However, both have a common thread and share some material.)

It seems that the next few decades may give us something really remarkable: truly intelligent computers; that, before the 21st century is a half, maybe a third, old, we could be living with machines capable of genuine, independent thought.  Apparently, this is not science fiction or the ‘artificial intelligence’ of the 20th century but real intelligence.  So many questions … Can that really happen?  Will it?  How?  What does it mean?  What will that world be like?  What do we have to look forward to?  Or to fear?  How do we get from here to there … and do we want to?  How does today’s AI technology develop…

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Southern man does need you around, anyhow.

Bruce Springsteen And Neil Young Sing “Whip My Hair” Jimmy Fallon – YouTube.

Innovation

Having an exchange on the Science of Science Policy (SciSIP) listserv in which I argue that we shouldn’t reduce our idea of ‘innovation’ to technological innovation.

Someone suggests, then, the following: “Anything new that creates jobs.”

Not exactly the sort of anti-reductionist thinking I had in mind.