Updated: 1/3/2006; 8:15:49 PM

 Monday, December 05, 2005

Another suburban legend shattered


Cosmic Variance —

BeeThe laws of physics are safe for now.

It occasionally comes to pass that someone, for reasons that frankly escape me, would like to make the point that science doesn’t know everything. It doesn’t, of course, which is so obvious that the point hardly needs making. Equally obviously, science does know some things; when it comes to mundane features of the natural world, one hopes that existing puzzles will eventually be figured out.

One of the favorite anecdotes for the don’t-know-everything crowd involves the flight of the honeybee. As you may have heard, “bees shouldn’t be able to fly,” according to science as we know it. In fact, this idea goes back to French entomologists August Magnan and André Sainte-Lague, who in 1934 calculated that bee flight was aerodynamically impossible. Since bees have been observed to fly, the smart money has always been that Magnan and Sainte-Lague were, in scientific parlance, “wrong.” But that’s not the same as understanding how the darn insects actually do flit around.

Now we know. Bioengineers Michael Dickinson, Douglas Altshuler and colleages have analyzed the flight of the bumblebee (if you will), using a combination of high-speed photography and robotic models. The trick is that bees have flight muscles that have evolved differently from those of other insects — unintelligent design, I suppose. Consequently, they flap much faster than any other animal their size, and emply a unique rotation of their wings.

Chalk up another success for science. I understand that Dickinson and Altshuler will now start working on how to get experimental predictions out of string theory.


Today 5:13:42 AM - by Sean
- Posted by Richard Chlopan - 11:34:46 PM -

Coach Leach Goes Deep, Very Deep


The New York Times Most E-mailed Articles — By changing the geometry of the game, and pushing the limits of space and time on the gridiron, Mike Leach of Texas Tech is taking football to some far-out places.

Yesterday 3:45:56 PM - by MICHAEL LEWIS
- Posted by Richard Chlopan - 11:33:35 PM -

Bradley Whitford: Get The IRS Out of My Church


The Huffington Post | Raw Feed —

I have been a member of the All Saints Church in Pasadena for over ten years. The recent revelations of an IRS investigation into its non-profit status as the result of a sermon given a week before the last presidential election by Rector Emeritus George Regas has outraged and galvanized our congregation.



The support we have received from across the spectrum of faith communities, including traditionally conservative evangelical leaders, has solidified our resolve—the United States government has no place in our houses of worship, and the selective targeting of churches who speak out on the issues of the day sets a dangerous precedent that threatens the religious freedom of every citizen.



The sermon in question explicitly refused to endorse a particular candidate. It did, however, hold George Bush and John Kerry up to the high standard of Christian values. Both were found wanting.



Values not put into action are meaningless, nom matter how lofty they are. It is the obligation of our spiritual leaders to not just articulate those values, but to make them a reality.



We live in an age where describing oneself as a “person of faith” carries with it a tremendous political advantage. But too often in the public arena, being “religious” is defined only as a search for personal salvation and a willingness to adhere to dogma.



Declaring oneself a Christian is easy. Putting Christian values to work in a dangerous and violent world is not.



Perhaps the best response to the tragedy of 9/11 was a preemptive war against a country that had not nothing to do with the attacks. Tens of thousands of deaths later, perhaps it is still the right decision.



But it is not Christian.



Perhaps it is good economics to give me, an actor on a television show, over a quarter of a million dollars in tax relief over the last five years as the poverty rate climbs, as we burden our children with structural budget deficits and cut services for our most vulnerable citizens.



But it is not Christian.



Perhaps the Death Penalty is an acceptable way to punish criminals.



But it is not Christian.



Jesus Christ was the Prince of Peace, not the Prince of Preemptive War. He was an advocate for the poor, not of supply-side economics. And let’s not forget that Jesus himself died in a bogus death-penalty rap. His was the original “bleeding heart,” yet I am afraid he would be described pejoratively by many today as a “do-gooder.”



President Bush proudly proclaims himself a Christian and tells us that his faith has changed his heart. Perhaps one day his faith will change his policies. Until then, I am proud to be a part of a congregation that seeks to hold all public officials to their easy— and too often empty—proclamations of faith.


Yesterday 4:47:41 PM - by Bradley Whitford
- Posted by Richard Chlopan - 11:32:54 PM -

Year-end "best of" lists


Marginal Revolution —

Here is a meta-list (why is there no "best of" the "best of" lists?); it is expected to grow to over 500 entries.  Thanks to the ever-excellent http://kottke.org for the pointer.


Yesterday 2:43:00 PM - by Tyler Cowen
- Posted by Richard Chlopan - 11:31:13 PM -

State of the Art


Backwards City —
But curiously, the most melancholic comic strip that I've encountered emerges neither from the alternative weeklies nor from the distant past, but fromperhaps the most celebrated and mainstream of the mainstream comics: "Calvin and Hobbes."

It is hard to understand why "Calvin and Hobbes" has developed so firmly a middlebrow reputation, though I suspect it has something to do with the countlessdecals of Calvin mischievously urinating on the back windows of S.U.V.'s. (All bootlegs, by the way. To his syndicate's chagrin, the creator Bill Wattersonrefused to sign off on any merchandising apart from books. "If I'd wanted to sell plush garbage, I'd have gone to work as a carny," he said in a rare interviewhe gave to Comics Journal in 1989.)

John Hodgman laments the current state of comic strips, recommending some collected classics in time for the holidays. No, not just the Complete Calvin & Hobbes--that one's already taken care of, no?

Yesterday 2:29:00 PM - by J.T. Hill
- Posted by Richard Chlopan - 11:30:42 PM -

George Dyson on Google book scanning: "The Universal Library"


Boing Boing — Xeni Jardin: Exerpt from an essay by George Dyson on Edge.org:

Digital coding is the universal language allowing free translation between abstract information and physical books. Once upon a time, if you wanted the information, you had to physically possess (or borrow) the book. If you wanted to purchase a new copy of the book, the title had to be "in print."

This is no longer true. Scan the text once, digitally, and the information becomes permanently available, anywhere, no matter what happens to physical copies of the book. Search for an out-of-print title and you will now find bookshops (and libraries) who have copies available; soon enough the options will include bookshops offering to print a copy, just for you. Google Library and Google Print have been renamed Google Book Search — not because Google is shying away from building the Universal Library (with links to the Universal Bookstore) but because search comes first. To paraphrase Tolkien: "One ring to find them, one ring to bind them, one ring to rule them all."

Why does this strike such a nerve? Because so many of us (not only authors) love books. In their combination of mortal, physical embodiment with immortal, disembodied knowledge, books are the mirror of ourselves. Books are not mere physical objects. They have a life of their own. Wholesale scanning, we fear, will strip our books of their souls. Works that were sewn together by hand, one chapter at a time, should not be unbound page by page and distributed click by click. Talk about "snippets" makes authors flinch.

Link

Yesterday 12:30:58 AM - by Xeni Jardin

- Posted by Richard Chlopan - 11:30:07 PM -

Spiffy Serenity: The puppet show...


Bootleg fark.com rss feed — Serenity: The puppet show

Today 12:15:48 AM
- Posted by Richard Chlopan - 11:25:28 PM -

New look 'Science and Consciousness Review'


Mind Hacks —

A long running web journal, the Science and Consciousness Review, has relaunched with a new look and growing content.

The journal is run by three academic scientists who want to open up consciousness research and discussion to the internet. The journal contains book reviews, summaries of new papers and internet resources.

One of the most interesting recent posts is about the increasingly comprehensive Consciousness Studies Wikibook, which is a becoming a dynamic textbook on consciousness science.


Link to Science and Consciousness Review.
Link to Consciousness Studies Wikibook.


Today 3:30:00 AM - by vaughan
- Posted by Richard Chlopan - 11:23:59 PM -