Science and Islam *

Aug 14th, 2003 | Filed by

‘a minimum amount of freedom is necessary for the advancement of science, for the advancement of thought.’… Read the rest



Congratulation or Denigration? *

Aug 14th, 2003 | Filed by

Do higher A-level pass rates mean better students or dumbed-down exams?… Read the rest



Students Opt For Easier Subjects *

Aug 14th, 2003 | Filed by

We need math, science and language students, but we’re getting television students.… Read the rest



Holistic, Sacred, Communal Bilge

Aug 14th, 2003 2:01 am | By

Ah well. Sometimes I worry about the possibility of becoming ever more reactionary and bilious as the days thunder past, but then other times, other times, I just throw up my hands and give in to it. There is just no alternative. For instance when reading the cringe-making ‘Mission Statement’ on the Web site of what sounds like the most cringe-making educational institution one could possibly imagine. The kind of place that makes one want to, I don’t know, dress up as a combination Wall Street shark and Ramboesque thug and roam about kicking small children and grinding the faces of the poor.

We teach of the need to heal from the traumas of living in less than a just,

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Un-Victorian Uppityness *

Aug 13th, 2003 | Filed by

Mill’s ‘On Liberty’ has more to do with unchained minds than unfettered possessions.… Read the rest



Shadows on the Cave Wall

Aug 12th, 2003 8:56 pm | By

This article has a lot of food for thought, about how science works and the vexed relationship between theory and experiment.

It was not theory but experiment that plucked the quark idea from near oblivion. Aided and abetted by theory, experiments made quarks real, transforming them from a wayward hypothesis into concrete objects of experience. Experiments are what ultimately discarded the science fashions of the sixties and turned quarks into hard scientific fact.

It’s interesting to think of science and physics as being centers of fashion. Who knew that quarks were a fashion until experiments provided evidence that they were actually there, were not just Platonic physics, as Riordan calls it, but ‘hard scientific fact’? Well of course in a … Read the rest



Freedom of Inquiry *

Aug 12th, 2003 | Filed by

Accusations that ideology is shaping research require evidence.… Read the rest



Martin Amis Unlikely to be Nominated *

Aug 12th, 2003 | Filed by

So also (not surprisingly) unlikely to win.… Read the rest



Whose Culture?

Aug 11th, 2003 9:51 pm | By

And here we have an exhilarating opinion piece. Exhilarating I suppose because the things it says are both so obvious and so non-trendy. (Though there’s some danger in that line of thought – or perhaps I just mean some discomfort. The woods are all too full of people who are all to willing to make you a present of their bravely unfashionable opinions. You know the kind of thing. Defiant racism and sexism, defiant urges to trample on people, defiant calls to get rid of the minimum wage. Go away.) But that being said, the fact remains that this is great stuff, and should be said more often and more loudly, especially to people who don’t know it yet:

The

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Dyslexia in Excelsis

Aug 11th, 2003 8:16 pm | By

Well here’s a piece that strikes me as completely bizarre. As if one should stare at a landscape buried under three feet of snow and say ‘How come it never snows around here?’ Or go for a nice walk in Death Valley and comment on how wet and cold it is, or eat some vanilla ice cream and say it’s too spicy. It’s like a kind of dyslexia. I suppose it’s really just the usual: confirmation bias, seeing what one expects to see and ignoring what one doesn’t. No doubt I’ll just be doing the same thing but in reverse – Elshtain sees the photograph and I see the negative or vice versa. But all the same, it does seem … Read the rest



No, Not Proof, Evidence

Aug 11th, 2003 5:38 pm | By

What was that I was just saying the other day about people translating ‘evidence’ into ‘proof,’ thinking the two words are interchangeable, just plain confusing the two? You’d think at least science journalists would know the difference, wouldn’t you? Well you’d be wrong, apparently.

Sir Patrick said scientists used peer review “almost exclusively” to publicise findings. But he said researchers could still attract publicity “for highly questionable results even when they offered no evidence that their research had been checked”. This was evident earlier this year when the Raelian sect announced the births of human clones. The only proof the sect’s US-based company Clonaid produced to support its assertion was a photograph of one of the children alleged to have

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Cultural Relativism of Human Rights *

Aug 11th, 2003 | Filed by

‘What is usually defined as the culture of a people is in reality the interpretation and discourse put forth by the ruling class…’… Read the rest



‘Platonic Physics’ Not a Good Idea *

Aug 11th, 2003 | Filed by

Theories must be tested by experiment or else they are just fashion.… Read the rest



Dispute Over GM Contamination *

Aug 11th, 2003 | Filed by

Doubts about evidence, peer review, disagreement – nobody said science was easy.… Read the rest



Publishing by Press Conference *

Aug 11th, 2003 | Filed by

‘Stories that get into the media that haven’t been properly reviewed can do enormous damage.’… Read the rest



Gospel

Aug 10th, 2003 9:20 pm | By

Yet another enthralling Start the Week, this one from June (I don’t listen to them in any sort of coherent order, rather I listen to the ones that sound most interesting first, in case I get run over by a bus before I get a chance to listen to them all). It’s interesting in general, but especially for the moment when, after everyone else has expressed great enthusiasm for a film about a charismatic Los Angeles preacher at a gospel church, Norman Finkelstein dissents from the general applause. He thinks it’s all an irritating exercise in white primitivism, and that the preacher in question is an embarrassment. It takes a bit of nerve to say that!… Read the rest



Nazi Pseudoscience *

Aug 10th, 2003 | Filed by

Aryans in Tibet, Blavatsky’s tapestry of tosh, Himmler and the Venus of Willendorf.… Read the rest



Get Used To It *

Aug 10th, 2003 | Filed by

The time to adapt to weather extremes is now.… Read the rest



Global Hotting *

Aug 10th, 2003 | Filed by

It’s going to go on this way only worse, experts say, as UK swelters.… Read the rest



Bronte-Schlock *

Aug 9th, 2003 | Filed by

New BBC drama about the Brontes introduces new myths in place of the old.… Read the rest