Quark Soup by David Appell: Being Clear About Watts
It's been clear for years that Anthony Watts is immature in his personal attacks on people in climate science he disagrees with. (Who can forget his snide questioning of whether they are patriotic enough to fly the American flag), but David Appell has been a recent target of his attention.
What's clear is that Watts just makes things up, both on science*, and in his personal attacks.
* He had no basis for a claim he made to Andrew Bolt, which I covered a couple of years ago. Andrew Bolt never corrected it.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Bitcoin dissed
Why I want Bitcoin to die in a fire - Charlie's Diary
I have pretty much ignored the Bitcoin story - it seemed to be a popular idea with the same Libertarian crowd that likes the idea of floating artificial islands of nerds doing whatever Libertarians fantasise think it would be cool to do together all day (I dunno - play paintball?) - and therefore it was safe to assume it was a bad and anti-social idea.
So, today I see an article by Charlie Stross with his list of reasons why it is, indeed, a bad and anti-social idea. (I would have my doubts about the carbon cost issue, though, but everything else seems fair enough.)
I repeat my recent theme - Libertarians are useless. It probably would be a good idea if they all lived on one giant ship together, as (of course) they would be well armed (you know, just in case), and within 12 months some argument over an arcane matter of economics that no one else in the world worried about would result in a civil war and the sinking of their ship, both literally and metaphorically.
I have pretty much ignored the Bitcoin story - it seemed to be a popular idea with the same Libertarian crowd that likes the idea of floating artificial islands of nerds doing whatever Libertarians fantasise think it would be cool to do together all day (I dunno - play paintball?) - and therefore it was safe to assume it was a bad and anti-social idea.
So, today I see an article by Charlie Stross with his list of reasons why it is, indeed, a bad and anti-social idea. (I would have my doubts about the carbon cost issue, though, but everything else seems fair enough.)
I repeat my recent theme - Libertarians are useless. It probably would be a good idea if they all lived on one giant ship together, as (of course) they would be well armed (you know, just in case), and within 12 months some argument over an arcane matter of economics that no one else in the world worried about would result in a civil war and the sinking of their ship, both literally and metaphorically.
Two issue Tim
What did I say in ranty post yesterday about Tim Wilson not exactly being inundated with work as Human Rights Commissioner?
I noted two issues he is or is likely concerned with: s18C as used against Andrew Bolt (he's against it), and the anti bikie legislation in Queensland and elsewhere (where anyone could accurately guess - he'd be against it.)
And so it came to pass (it is nearly Christmas), Tim has an article in the Fairfax press this morning in which he talks about two issues - the ones I identified. (Oh, alright, he mentioned a third one, which has already been decided yesterday by the High Court, so he ain't going to be taking a lot of phone calls on that matter either.)
So we can pretty much see the future here: Tim will have a lot of arguments at Commission meetings about how his mate Andrew Bolt should never again face the horror of being taken to court when he refuses to acknowledge insulting, race based, mistakes, and will fail to persuade them that the law should be abolished in its entirety.
And he might take some extra phone calls (more than the 4 or so the HRC currently annually takes on freedom of expression issues) from bikies, in which his response will be "mate, I sympathise, I really do. And I'm writing an article about it as we speak. But not much else I can do at the moment, we're waiting on the High Court decision."
What a completely useless, partisan, appointment.
Update: I see that in comments flying about the internet, many have noted that one would have thought the biggest concern of a "Freedom Commissioner" might well be the incarceration of thousands of attempted immigrants on Christmas and Manus Island. Has Tim ever been known for talking about them, instead of his mater of Bolt and his really hurt feelings? Is there a little bit of a problem with "freedom of expression" from those who are involved in this hush-hush business? And is there anything that the HRC could do about it anyway?
I see that someone says he was on Insight once when the topic was assylum seekers, but no one has turned up what he actually said.
But lots of people haver noticed his tweet from 2011:
I noted two issues he is or is likely concerned with: s18C as used against Andrew Bolt (he's against it), and the anti bikie legislation in Queensland and elsewhere (where anyone could accurately guess - he'd be against it.)
And so it came to pass (it is nearly Christmas), Tim has an article in the Fairfax press this morning in which he talks about two issues - the ones I identified. (Oh, alright, he mentioned a third one, which has already been decided yesterday by the High Court, so he ain't going to be taking a lot of phone calls on that matter either.)
So we can pretty much see the future here: Tim will have a lot of arguments at Commission meetings about how his mate Andrew Bolt should never again face the horror of being taken to court when he refuses to acknowledge insulting, race based, mistakes, and will fail to persuade them that the law should be abolished in its entirety.
And he might take some extra phone calls (more than the 4 or so the HRC currently annually takes on freedom of expression issues) from bikies, in which his response will be "mate, I sympathise, I really do. And I'm writing an article about it as we speak. But not much else I can do at the moment, we're waiting on the High Court decision."
What a completely useless, partisan, appointment.
Update: I see that in comments flying about the internet, many have noted that one would have thought the biggest concern of a "Freedom Commissioner" might well be the incarceration of thousands of attempted immigrants on Christmas and Manus Island. Has Tim ever been known for talking about them, instead of his mater of Bolt and his really hurt feelings? Is there a little bit of a problem with "freedom of expression" from those who are involved in this hush-hush business? And is there anything that the HRC could do about it anyway?
I see that someone says he was on Insight once when the topic was assylum seekers, but no one has turned up what he actually said.
But lots of people haver noticed his tweet from 2011:
Walked past Occupy Melbourne protest, all people who think freedom of speech = freedom 2 b heard, time wasters ... send in the water cannonsYes, just what the HRC needs: a commissioner not afraid to use water canon on people he disagrees with.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
The Useless Libertarians Who Think They're Useful
I don't recall the libertarian types of the Institute of Paid Advocacy (the right wing think tank funded, at least formerly, if not presently, by tobacco companies, and now in the pocket of Gina Rinehart and - I expect - Rupert Murdoch) being particularly concerned about s18C of the Racial Discrimination Act until Andrew Bolt found himself being prosecuted under it.
I assume that Bolt decided to fight rather than apologise for making inaccurate claims in an article with a clearly ridiculing tone. Or was he put up to a fight by his bosses prepared to fund his defence for the purposes of a bit of corporate grandstanding? Who knows? In any event, Bolt lost, has been carrying on like the biggest martyr ever in the history of Australia for free speech, despite his offending columns still being easily Googled to this day (with a "corrective notice" as ordered by the Court heading them), and all the while has had his hand held by the likes of John Roskam and Tim Wilson of the IPA, and Tony Abbott (the professional weathervane who became Prime Minister) while being told soothing words about how outrageous this whole action has been and he really is a tragic victim.
This has, psychologically for Bolt, been the worst thing that could have been done.
But the IPA, taking their cue from that and the Labor government's Finkelstein review into media regulation (which went no where, given that the government had no particular media scandal to hang their hat on) have decided that Freedom of Speech is the top way they can build a fake political crisis; and their supporters, clearly not the brightest people when assessing genuine political problems, have been happy to send money, despite the publicly available financial reports on the IPA website showing they have cash reserves of 1.5 million dollars which they appear to be saving merely for a rainy day. Fools and money, etc.
And now this is all topped off by the Abbott government appointing Tim Wilson to be a "Freedom Commissioner" on the Human Rights Commission. Yes, Tim Wilson from the organisation that has as a policy position the abolition of the HRC.
In this exchange on the Drum with the President of the Commission, Wilson was all outraged that the Commission did not specifically use the words "free speech" in a submission made to the government a year or two ago.
But what is more interesting is what Triggs notes in response (at 2.31) - the Commission takes 17,000 calls a year from the public, with a total of 4 being about freedom of expression.
Yes, Brandis: for the sake of 4 complaints a year, there is a need to have a Freedom Commissioner on the HRC.
Wilson's sole job seems to be to advocate for a repeal of s18C - the Bolt section - and Wilson's background in IP, trade and climate change denialism indicates no particular experience in matters of human rights at all. (Oh sure, he's no doubt been to dinners with Andrew Bolt and assured him he's a martyr.) What else he is supposed to spend his time on once the 18C issue is dealt with by the government - who knows? Prime advocate for bikies, perhaps, to have the freedom of association in criminal gangs? Yes, they'll be some useless grandstanding to be done over that, perhaps. And apart from that issue, given that the Abbott government is not going to introduce anything like what Labor was contemplating for media regulation reform, what is he going to spend his time on?
This is the most blatant political appointment conceivable to an unqualified big mouth and wannabe politician from what has become he most disreputable think tank in the land. (On that last point, as an example - as far as I know, Sinclair Davidson has never sought to defend the IPA's adoption of Gina Rinehart's Northern Australia "special treatment" program from this criticism by John Quiggin. Indeed, Davidson carries on like the biggest drama queen of all on the free speech issue, recently telling anyone from the Jewish lobby who are expressing concern about repeal of s18C that this is a some sort of dramatic fork in the road.)
Remember my rule of thumb: any person who has a good education yet spends their time on climate change denialism - they're not to be trusted on anything. This applies to Wilson, and anyone from the IPA. Of their crew, I only have a bare tolerance for Chris Berg, who (as far as I know) tends to steer away from the climate change issue. Yet he, of course, is also a Freedom drama queen. They all are. They are also useless and not to be trusted on the matter of the development of good policy. They know the answers already (small government! less taxes! climate change is a fraud! Repeat and repeat), and always work backwards from there.
I assume that Bolt decided to fight rather than apologise for making inaccurate claims in an article with a clearly ridiculing tone. Or was he put up to a fight by his bosses prepared to fund his defence for the purposes of a bit of corporate grandstanding? Who knows? In any event, Bolt lost, has been carrying on like the biggest martyr ever in the history of Australia for free speech, despite his offending columns still being easily Googled to this day (with a "corrective notice" as ordered by the Court heading them), and all the while has had his hand held by the likes of John Roskam and Tim Wilson of the IPA, and Tony Abbott (the professional weathervane who became Prime Minister) while being told soothing words about how outrageous this whole action has been and he really is a tragic victim.
This has, psychologically for Bolt, been the worst thing that could have been done.
But the IPA, taking their cue from that and the Labor government's Finkelstein review into media regulation (which went no where, given that the government had no particular media scandal to hang their hat on) have decided that Freedom of Speech is the top way they can build a fake political crisis; and their supporters, clearly not the brightest people when assessing genuine political problems, have been happy to send money, despite the publicly available financial reports on the IPA website showing they have cash reserves of 1.5 million dollars which they appear to be saving merely for a rainy day. Fools and money, etc.
And now this is all topped off by the Abbott government appointing Tim Wilson to be a "Freedom Commissioner" on the Human Rights Commission. Yes, Tim Wilson from the organisation that has as a policy position the abolition of the HRC.
In this exchange on the Drum with the President of the Commission, Wilson was all outraged that the Commission did not specifically use the words "free speech" in a submission made to the government a year or two ago.
But what is more interesting is what Triggs notes in response (at 2.31) - the Commission takes 17,000 calls a year from the public, with a total of 4 being about freedom of expression.
Yes, Brandis: for the sake of 4 complaints a year, there is a need to have a Freedom Commissioner on the HRC.
Wilson's sole job seems to be to advocate for a repeal of s18C - the Bolt section - and Wilson's background in IP, trade and climate change denialism indicates no particular experience in matters of human rights at all. (Oh sure, he's no doubt been to dinners with Andrew Bolt and assured him he's a martyr.) What else he is supposed to spend his time on once the 18C issue is dealt with by the government - who knows? Prime advocate for bikies, perhaps, to have the freedom of association in criminal gangs? Yes, they'll be some useless grandstanding to be done over that, perhaps. And apart from that issue, given that the Abbott government is not going to introduce anything like what Labor was contemplating for media regulation reform, what is he going to spend his time on?
This is the most blatant political appointment conceivable to an unqualified big mouth and wannabe politician from what has become he most disreputable think tank in the land. (On that last point, as an example - as far as I know, Sinclair Davidson has never sought to defend the IPA's adoption of Gina Rinehart's Northern Australia "special treatment" program from this criticism by John Quiggin. Indeed, Davidson carries on like the biggest drama queen of all on the free speech issue, recently telling anyone from the Jewish lobby who are expressing concern about repeal of s18C that this is a some sort of dramatic fork in the road.)
Remember my rule of thumb: any person who has a good education yet spends their time on climate change denialism - they're not to be trusted on anything. This applies to Wilson, and anyone from the IPA. Of their crew, I only have a bare tolerance for Chris Berg, who (as far as I know) tends to steer away from the climate change issue. Yet he, of course, is also a Freedom drama queen. They all are. They are also useless and not to be trusted on the matter of the development of good policy. They know the answers already (small government! less taxes! climate change is a fraud! Repeat and repeat), and always work backwards from there.
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Exactly
Conservatives Have No Idea What To Do About Recessions | Business Insider
Thanks to monty for the link, which explains exactly the problem with the Republican economics, and indeed with Australia right wing economists:
Thanks to monty for the link, which explains exactly the problem with the Republican economics, and indeed with Australia right wing economists:
Log your dreams in public
Naked in public? Dreams Cloud wants to get inside your mind | Crave - CNET
I haven't looked at the app yet, but the idea of people publicly logging their odd dreams sounds like it might be sorta fun, at least for a while.
I haven't looked at the app yet, but the idea of people publicly logging their odd dreams sounds like it might be sorta fun, at least for a while.
Does Tony Abbott know what he is doing?
Reserve Bank Reserve Fund foreign currency Australian dollar | Crikey
Bernard Keane in Crikey notes that Tony Abbott seems to think that his government giving the Reserve Bank $8 billion (and causing an immediate increased "blowout" - don't media organisations love that word - to the budget deficit) is about the Reserve Bank being able to intervene to drive down the Australian dollar.
Bernard says this is not the case:
Bernard Keane in Crikey notes that Tony Abbott seems to think that his government giving the Reserve Bank $8 billion (and causing an immediate increased "blowout" - don't media organisations love that word - to the budget deficit) is about the Reserve Bank being able to intervene to drive down the Australian dollar.
Bernard says this is not the case:
But the odd thing about Abbott’s remarks linking the $9 billion to pressure on the dollar is that there is no link. In contrast to the urgency portrayed by Hockey, the RBA hasn’t received the funding yet — as Treasury’s briefing on the issue to then-treasurer Wayne Swan earlier this year noted, there is no mechanism for the government to simply hand $9 billion to the RBA, so it will require a parliamentary appropriation. The RBA will in turn use the funding to buy foreign currencies, mainly the US dollar, because it aims to hold just over half of its assets in foreign currencies.
The $9 billion in fact has no bearing on whether the bank can intervene against the strength of the dollar — for one thing, it’s nowhere near enough to make a big difference. And pushing the dollar down will actually increase the value of the bank’s foreign currency holdings, rather than deplete its assets as Abbott appeared to suggest. It seems that Abbott doesn’t have a basic grasp of why exactly he’s blowing a $9 billion hole in his own deficit (no matter how much he might insist it’s Labor’s deficit).
Worse, he has created the impression that the $9 billion handout has a quid pro quo that the independent RBA will now intervene against the dollar. Our trade-exposed sector, particularly manufacturers but also miners (whose contracts are usually set in US dollars) will all benefit from a fall in the dollar, with flow-on benefits for federal government tax revenue. This will help the Abbott government avoid the nightmarish fate of the Gillard government, which had to sit back and watch as the Aussie dollar hammered the trade-exposed sectors of the economy and slashed corporate tax revenue while the RBA hummed and hawed about why the dollar wasn’t reacting like normal to a fall in our terms of trade.
Abbott’s remarks apparently caused confusion and concern at senior levels within the bank — yet another legacy of Hockey’s $9 billion handout, and the Prime Minister’s hazy grasp of economics.
Monday, December 16, 2013
Pressure on mothers to be
Developmental biology: Support mothers to secure future public health
Quite an interesting commentary here on the vital role for public health that science increasing sees in having healthy mothers right from pregnancy.
For example:
Quite an interesting commentary here on the vital role for public health that science increasing sees in having healthy mothers right from pregnancy.
For example:
The Hertfordshire data and similar records from other UK towns revealed, for instance, that a person weighing 2.7 kilograms (6 pounds) at birth has a 25% higher risk of contracting heart disease in later life, and a 30% higher risk of having a stroke, compared with someone weighing 4.1 kilograms (9 pounds) at birth3.And how about this for some justification for my feeling that IVF has involved too much mucking around with nature:
These findings were soon strengthened by data from a cohort of 20,000 people born in Helsinki between 1924 and 1944. This study showed, for example, that if all the babies at birth had had weights within the highest third of the total range, the incidence of diabetes in later life would have been halved4. In the years since, numerous other studies, involving people from places as diverse as Europe, India, Guatemala, the Philippines and South Africa, have revealed similar correlations with effects that extend to the health of grandchildren.
In the past 15 years, researchers have begun to understand the biology underlying the links between development and chronic disease. The evidence suggests that women should start eating healthily well before they get pregnant. Women who are obese, for example, accumulate more metabolites (such as insulin, lactate and triglycerides) in their ovarian follicles5 than do women who are not obese. This accumulation can reduce their fertility and increase the likelihood that their offspring will develop certain diseases, such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease or cancer, later in life.
At the moment of conception, the growing embryo seems to be exquisitely sensitive to its nutritional environment. Studies of babies born through in vitro fertilization, for instance, have shown that birth weights can be affected simply by changing the constituents of the medium in which the embryos are cultured.It would certainly appear that it will be decades yet before we truly know the long term health consequences of the IVF techniques.
Spin, spin, Sheridan
Now this is a phone call I would like to have the exact transcript to.
Greg Sheridan took a call from the Indonesian ambassador to the US on the weekend who was delivering President SBY's reaction Sheridan's (and The Australian's) Saturday story that there really was good reason to spy on his wife.
I found the reasons given pretty unconvincing, and could only imagine that SBY would find them offensive, but Sheridan is trying to put the phone call in the best possible light:
Greg Sheridan took a call from the Indonesian ambassador to the US on the weekend who was delivering President SBY's reaction Sheridan's (and The Australian's) Saturday story that there really was good reason to spy on his wife.
I found the reasons given pretty unconvincing, and could only imagine that SBY would find them offensive, but Sheridan is trying to put the phone call in the best possible light:
Dr Yudhoyono instructed Dr Djalal to ring me to convey the President's personal reaction to the stories. Dr Djalal checked with Dr Yudhoyono that these remarks could be publicly attributed to the President. The President said he found elements of The Weekend Australian's coverage showed balance and that there were some positive aspects of the coverage.This has the heavy smell of spin around it, doesn't it? On Sheridan's part, I mean. I would like to know how much of the conversation was about the "personal hurt", and whether they was mention of "negative elements" as well as the "some positive elements".
Dr Yudhoyono also pointed out that it was he, as President in 2005, who first moved to elevate the Indonesia-Australia relationship to the higher plane it has existed on in recent years. Since that time, he said, he had worked consistently to improve the relationship between the two countries.
He said the dispute over the spying story had hurt him personally. The President said he was determined to repair the relationship and would work towards a solution. This needs to happen through the steps the two nations had agreed on. It also needed to happen in a way that satisfied his domestic needs.
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Politicians and movies don't mix
It's regrettable that Al Gore headed "An Inconvenient Truth": he gave Right wingers an excuse to claim a serious environmental issue as being something only a "Lefty" should worry about.
But now we seem to have another good example of a politician unwisely getting into the movie business. Rick Santorum is the CEO of a Christian movie company, and its first release "A Christmas Candle" is receiving some disastrous, but pretty funny, reviews. The movie features Susan Boyle, a bit of casting that appears to have very wrong.
Peter Bradshaw in the Guardian:
But now we seem to have another good example of a politician unwisely getting into the movie business. Rick Santorum is the CEO of a Christian movie company, and its first release "A Christmas Candle" is receiving some disastrous, but pretty funny, reviews. The movie features Susan Boyle, a bit of casting that appears to have very wrong.
Peter Bradshaw in the Guardian:
The urgent question of when Susan Boyle will give us her cinema debut has been settled. She makes a truly extraordinary appearance in this film, not just singing but acting, too, playing a churchwoman with the voice of an angel in a stilted, treacly, and, frankly, bizarre tale of yuletide miracles....It's not just a Left wing Guardian reviewer, though. In the Daily Mail:
Every 20 minutes or so, Boyle is allowed on to say a line, which she does weirdly quietly, as if talking in her sleep. Her facial expression never changes. And all the professional actors around her look stunned, like those Dallas cops when Jack Ruby stepped forward to shoot Lee Harvey Oswald.
So I didn’t go to watch The Christmas Candle, Boyle’s big-screen acting debut, with the same negativity as the audience when Ant and Dec sent her out on stage four years ago.And another (although this review does leave poor Susan alone):
Maybe she’d be just fine.
Unfortunately, she isn’t. Boyle really can’t act.
In fact, Ant or Dec might have been more convincing as church warden’s wife Eleanor Hopewell, and one of Boyle’s co-stars, Lesley Manville, has publicly questioned the decision to cast her.
Yet the big problem with this film is not dear old Subo and the slightly creepy little giggles she keeps emitting, it’s the muddled narrative.
"The Christmas Candle" is a determinedly retro-minded holiday saga that contains no foul language, gruesome violence indeed anything beyond the mildest suggestion of hanky-panky, and for a certain portion of the moviegoing public, these absences alone would be enough to warrant a recommendation. The trouble is that the filmmakers have also neglected to include such other elements as wit, style, energy or anything resembling a coherent narrative.Better luck next time, Rick!
Saturday, December 14, 2013
It's OK when Rupert does it...
So, how's this supposed to work?
The Guardian and the ABC report from the Snowden leaks that Australia had targeted the Indonesia President's wife's mobile phone, causing a major diplomatic falling out which is supposed to cured with some future protocol. Presumably, this will involve an indication from us that we agree it's not a nice thing to spy on politicians' wives.
The ABC Collective* condemns the Guardian and the ABC for publicising the spying story. Against our national interests, etc etc.
Story goes quiet for a couple of weeks.
Then today, The Australian comes out with headline stories that read:
Hey! It's quite OK to spy on Indonesian President's wives after all! Kevin Rudd made a good call!
How the hell is that supposed to help repair the relationship?
In fact, isn't it just about the worst possible thing that you could do if our robot Foreign Minister is still negotiating some future promises with the Indonesians? No, according to Bolt, it's important that the Right attack the Left for criticising the decision to spy on her.
This is ludicrous behaviour by the Right, if you ask me.
* The Australian, Andrew Bolt, and Catallaxy, for any new reader.
The Guardian and the ABC report from the Snowden leaks that Australia had targeted the Indonesia President's wife's mobile phone, causing a major diplomatic falling out which is supposed to cured with some future protocol. Presumably, this will involve an indication from us that we agree it's not a nice thing to spy on politicians' wives.
The ABC Collective* condemns the Guardian and the ABC for publicising the spying story. Against our national interests, etc etc.
Story goes quiet for a couple of weeks.
Then today, The Australian comes out with headline stories that read:
Hey! It's quite OK to spy on Indonesian President's wives after all! Kevin Rudd made a good call!
How the hell is that supposed to help repair the relationship?
In fact, isn't it just about the worst possible thing that you could do if our robot Foreign Minister is still negotiating some future promises with the Indonesians? No, according to Bolt, it's important that the Right attack the Left for criticising the decision to spy on her.
This is ludicrous behaviour by the Right, if you ask me.
* The Australian, Andrew Bolt, and Catallaxy, for any new reader.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Michelle's summary seems pretty right to me
Grattan on Friday: 100 days and the "adults" still have a lot of growing up to do.
It starts:
It starts:
It is just 100 days on Monday since the election, but the Abbott government lacks that air of excitement that power often brings. Rather, it is staggering towards Christmas, mugged by moving from rhetoric to reality, from the disciplined order of opposition to the setbacks and unexpected challenges of office.
We will do, Abbott pledged before the election, reeling off intentions, only to find there are many things, including the core promises of repealing the carbon and mining taxes, that he can’t do, at least for the moment.
He’d run a government of no surprises, he said. Well, he has been surprised, unpleasantly – most notably by the revelations about Australian spying in Indonesia, as well as by Holden’s intended departure.
And there’s been the unsettling reminder that voters were more anxious to throw out Labor than enthusiastic about the Coalition; now they’re unimpressed by the government’s early efforts. This week’s Newspoll had the ALP leading 52-48%. Satisfaction with Abbott’s performance was 40% - it has fallen steadily from 47% in October. Opposition leader Bill Shorten’s satisfaction rating was 44% - it has risen steadily from 32% in October.
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Spooky children's stories
The Science of Reincarnation | The University of Virginia Magazine
The work of the late University of Virginia Professor Ian Stevenson on reincarnation was mentioned in comments here recently, and I see now that the University still has a psychiatrist who conducts research on the topic.
The link gives a pretty good example of one case he knows about in detail.
I am a bit surprised to see that 70% of children who suddenly claim to have lived before are male. But it is interesting to hear of American cases. If I recall correctly, one of the big issues with Stevenson's work which (I think) dealt with a lot of Indian cases, is that the kids were being raised in a society which already accepts reincarnation, and they would surely be influenced by that in their imaginative life.
That's a lot harder to see as an influence in America.
You should also read the comments following the article. Some people are "appalled" that the University magazine would run such an article.
The work of the late University of Virginia Professor Ian Stevenson on reincarnation was mentioned in comments here recently, and I see now that the University still has a psychiatrist who conducts research on the topic.
The link gives a pretty good example of one case he knows about in detail.
I am a bit surprised to see that 70% of children who suddenly claim to have lived before are male. But it is interesting to hear of American cases. If I recall correctly, one of the big issues with Stevenson's work which (I think) dealt with a lot of Indian cases, is that the kids were being raised in a society which already accepts reincarnation, and they would surely be influenced by that in their imaginative life.
That's a lot harder to see as an influence in America.
You should also read the comments following the article. Some people are "appalled" that the University magazine would run such an article.
Wasted trip
BBC News - Dinosaur asteroid 'sent life to Mars'
The asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs may have catapulted life to Mars and the moons of Jupiter, US researchers say.They calculated how many Earth rocks big enough to shelter life were ejected by asteroids in the last 3.5bn years.
The Chicxulub impact was strong enough to fire chunks of debris all the way to Europa, they write in Astrobiology.
Thousands of potentially life-bearing rocks also made it to Mars, which may once have been habitable, they add.
"We find that rock capable of carrying life has likely transferred from both Earth and Mars to all of the terrestrial planets in the solar system and Jupiter," says lead author Rachel Worth, of Penn State University.
"Any missions to search for life on Titan or the moons of Jupiter will have to consider whether biological material is of independent origin, or another branch in Earth's family tree."
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Sounds kind of improbable to me...
Life possible in the early Universe
Aliens might have existed during the Universe’s infancy. A set of calculations suggests that liquid water — a prerequisite for life — could have formed on rocky planets just 15 million years after the Big Bang.But as one critic says further down in the article:
Abraham Loeb, an astrophysicist at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has realized that in the early Universe, the energy required to keep water liquid could have come from the cosmic microwave background, the afterglow of the Big Bang, rather than from host stars. Today, the temperature of this relic radiation is just 2.7 kelvin, but at an age of around 15 million years it would have kept the entire Universe at a balmy 300 kelvin, says Loeb, who posted his calculations to the arXiv preprint server this month (http://arxiv.org/abs/1312.0613).
Loeb says that rocky planets could have existed at that time, in pockets of the Universe where matter was exceptionally dense, leading to the formation of massive, short-lived stars that would have enriched these pockets in the heavier elements needed to make planets. He suggests that there would have been a habitable epoch of 2 million or 3 million years during which all rocky planets would have been able to maintain liquid water, regardless of their distance from a star. “The whole Universe was once an incubator for life,” he says.
Christopher Jarzynski, a biophysicist at the University of Maryland, College Park, is not convinced that life could exist in a uniformly warm Universe. Life on Earth depends thermodynamically not only on the heat source of the Sun, but also on the cold cosmic microwave background, which provides a heat sink, he notes. “Life feeds off this,” he says. And Alexander Vilenkin, a cosmologist at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, says that a few million years is too short a time to produce intelligent life.Anyway, if true, and aliens did evolve then, it certainly sets up well the idea that our alien overlords (like the ones in 2001 A Space Odyssey) are very old indeed.
Love fight
A rather odd on line fight has broken out between those who hate the movie Love Actually, and those who defend it. (The 10 year anniversary of its release seems to be the motivation for this re-assessment.)
Christopher Orr started it with his lengthy explanation of why he thinks the movie is awful and actually anti-romantic. His critique is not perfect - he says he thinks Bill Nighy is terrific, whereas I always find him hammy and annoying. But he makes a pretty strong case against the movie overall.
(I just found the movie extremely unconvincing in virtually every story thread. I wrote at the time that I found some of the stories verging on creepy, but I've actually forgotten which ones now.)
Orr's article has now been followed by this:
I Will Not Be Ashamed of Loving Love Actually - Emma Green - The Atlantic
and she brings in CS Lewis to defend her take on the movie. (!) [I somehow have my doubts that he would have taken to the love story between actors doing fake porn scenes.]
Other haters and lover of the movie have taken this as a cue to join in. I see that this Australian entry is pretty good - she seems to dislike it in pretty much exactly the same ways I do. After than, you can read a defence of the movie on Mother Earth News. Then you can go visit another Australian woman who dislikes the movie.
I think the "noes" have it.
UPDATE: An English young bloke in The Guardian now has a go at Australians for criticising it, even though this round of criticism started in America, declaring it his favourite movie, ever. (!) I think he should be a little embarrassed about that, in all honesty.
Christopher Orr started it with his lengthy explanation of why he thinks the movie is awful and actually anti-romantic. His critique is not perfect - he says he thinks Bill Nighy is terrific, whereas I always find him hammy and annoying. But he makes a pretty strong case against the movie overall.
(I just found the movie extremely unconvincing in virtually every story thread. I wrote at the time that I found some of the stories verging on creepy, but I've actually forgotten which ones now.)
Orr's article has now been followed by this:
I Will Not Be Ashamed of Loving Love Actually - Emma Green - The Atlantic
and she brings in CS Lewis to defend her take on the movie. (!) [I somehow have my doubts that he would have taken to the love story between actors doing fake porn scenes.]
Other haters and lover of the movie have taken this as a cue to join in. I see that this Australian entry is pretty good - she seems to dislike it in pretty much exactly the same ways I do. After than, you can read a defence of the movie on Mother Earth News. Then you can go visit another Australian woman who dislikes the movie.
I think the "noes" have it.
UPDATE: An English young bloke in The Guardian now has a go at Australians for criticising it, even though this round of criticism started in America, declaring it his favourite movie, ever. (!) I think he should be a little embarrassed about that, in all honesty.
Drink up
BBC News - Artificial sweetener aspartame 'is safe'
I work on the assumption that if the Europeans think a food additive is safe, it almost certainly is.
I work on the assumption that if the Europeans think a food additive is safe, it almost certainly is.
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
An early Christmas present...
...at least for those of us who didn't vote for Abbott.
From the Financial Review:
From the Financial Review:
The Abbott government’s extraordinary collapse in public support has been confirmed in the latest Newspoll, which puts Labor well ahead on a two-party basis and shows the Coalition has lost its carbon tax advantage.Actually, I don't really think that it was "a landslide victory", but apart from that, a good report!
The Newspoll, published in The Australian on Tuesday, finds the Coalition’s election-winning margin has been erased in just three months, with Labor now leading the two-party preferred vote with 52 per cent compared with the Abbott government’s 48 per cent.
The poll result confirms an Australian Financial Review/Nielsen poll, published two weeks ago, which was the first since the election to show that voters had dramatically shifted allegiance away from the Coalition, despite the party’s landslide win on September 7.
This translates into a 5.5 per cent swing against the government since the country voted, a shift strongly represented in the Financial Review’s Poll of Polls.
Monday, December 09, 2013
Counting men
I've noticed in the last 6 months that some conservative Catholics in the blogosphere have taken to claiming that the CDC in the US thinks that only 2% of men engage in "same sex behaviour". (And conclude from that "hardly anyone is gay - why is gay marriage needed?)
In fact, the 2011 study they rely on says this in the abstract:
With that background, it was interesting to read this article in the New York Times in which a guy with a PhD in economics looks at the different threads of evidence and agrees with a 5% figure for "men who are predominantly attracted to men".
The most interesting aspect of the article is, however, the evidence he looks at for those parts of America where it seems men are more likely to be "in the closet". (It's centred in the Southern, evangelical States.) I thought this part was an innovative bit of research, and a bit darkly amusing:
In fact, the 2011 study they rely on says this in the abstract:
Estimates of the proportion of men who engaged in same-sex behavior differed by recall period: past year = 2.9% (95%CI, 2.6–3.2); past five years = 3.9% (3.5–4.4); ever = 6.9% (5.1–8.6).Which, of course, indicates that the true percent of gay or bisexual men would likely be around 4 - 5%.
With that background, it was interesting to read this article in the New York Times in which a guy with a PhD in economics looks at the different threads of evidence and agrees with a 5% figure for "men who are predominantly attracted to men".
The most interesting aspect of the article is, however, the evidence he looks at for those parts of America where it seems men are more likely to be "in the closet". (It's centred in the Southern, evangelical States.) I thought this part was an innovative bit of research, and a bit darkly amusing:
The other point that gays rights activists can rely on when talking about the relevance of numbers is this (I only thought to look this up on the weekend):Additional evidence that suggests that many gay men in intolerant states are deeply in the closet comes from a surprising source: the Google searches of married women. It turns out that wives suspect their husbands of being gay rather frequently. In the United States, of all Google searches that begin “Is my husband...,” the most common word to follow is “gay.” “Gay” is 10 percent more common in such searches than the second-place word, “cheating.” It is 8 times more common than “an alcoholic” and 10 times more common than “depressed.”Searches questioning a husband’s sexuality are far more common in the least tolerant states. The states with the highest percentage of women asking this question are South Carolina and Louisiana. In fact, in 21 of the 25 states where this question is most frequently asked, support for gay marriage is lower than the national average.
By 1933, German Jews were largely urban, middle class, prosperous in business, and well represented in the professions (especially medicine and law). They were culturally integrated but represented less than 1 percent of the total population.PS: I still don't support gay marriage, and would prefer it be dealt with by civil unions, perhaps even following the Tasmanian model which allow for other co-dependency relationships to be registered too. But at least I don't argue dishonestly about it.
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