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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20111106080929/http://www.samefacts.com/category/science-and-its-methods/

Archive for the ‘Science and its methods’ Category

September 24th, 2011

The first FTL-neutrino joke.

August 31st, 2011

Conservative candidates are now routinely asked to take a stand on whether they “Think evolution is just a theory” or whether they are among the fallen who “Believe in evolution”. These exchanges nearly bring up my breakfast on their own merits and have the added disadvantage of mis-educating the public about the nature of scientific [...]

July 17th, 2011

Did Galileo discover Neptune centuries before its official identification? This is one of many fascinating questions explored in a delightful and informative BBC radio program that broadcast this week on the planet’s “first birthday”. It’s very much worth your time if you are an astronomy buff or just someone who enjoys high quality science journalism. [...]

June 2nd, 2011

(Cross-posted from the Century Foundation’s Taking Note site) There are many good reasons to fork over the cash and support the New York Times. The obituary section is one of those reasons. Today’s Times includes a nicely-written obituary of the biophysicist Rosalyn Yalow. She was only the second woman to win the Nobel Prize in [...]

April 24th, 2011

The current Harper’s reprints Environmental Microbiology’s annual list of selected peer reviewer comments on submitted articles, featuring such snark as “this manuscript has nearly sucked the will to live out of me” and “This is an interesting manuscript, not because of its results, but because of its complete ignorance of the scientific process”. The proper [...]

April 18th, 2011

One of the predicted consequences of global warming – and let’s note that we have already had a good bit of that; it’s not something that might happen – is extreme weather events: wetter storms, more violent storms, and so on.   The devastation from the 240-odd tornadoes this weekend’s storm wound up is exactly that [...]

April 17th, 2011

In my freshman year I took the introductory chemistry course for people who had had some chemistry, and as it happened, that year William Lipscomb took it over from a popular prof who was on sabbatical. His long line of PhDs (three more Nobels, uh-huh) and colleagues will be writing remembrances of his scientific contributions, [...]

April 1st, 2011

Is so.

January 6th, 2011

I’m observing a remarkable constellation of very high information-density items popping up in the news.  My favorite, just on aggregate looniness grounds, is that (i) Grover Norquist has arranged for the (ii) CPAC to be infiltrated and subverted by the (iii) Muslim Brotherhood. Then there’s the astonishing 1998 finding that vaccinations cause autism.  A Cornell [...]

December 14th, 2010

An open thread on climate science – entirely pointless.