Archive
You are currently browsing the (Pseudo-)Science Blog blog archives for August, 2013.
Aug
29
Aug
9
Another UFO
This one in Naples, Florida.
Fortunately, the video "was sent to "MOUFON", a UFO organization, in Ohio, where it's being analyzed. " Hopefully they'll be able to determine whether these really were aliens.
You can find the story here.
Aug
8
Global warming means more lobsters . . .
The warming waters in the Gulf of Maine have led to record catches recently:
“For decades, the lobster catches in the Gulf of Maine were very steady at about 20 million pounds per year. . . . Then they jumped to 40 million pounds per year and last year we landed a record 125 million pounds of lobsters.
The problem is, the water is going to keep getting warmer. And once it gets too warm, the lobster can't survive.
“Anything above 20º C is extremely stressful for lobsters. . . . Since 2004 the pace of warming has picked up substantially, to about 0.26ºC per year.
The lobster stocks off of Rhode Island and Connecticut are already decimated. Massachusetts will be next. And then Maine.
Aug
6
Are supernatural powers real?
National Geographic investigates claims of paranormal abilities. Is the Sufi ability to withstand piercings in the body due to some supernatural force? Can martial arts practitioners use chi to knock over an opponent?
Warning: The video includes some graphic sequences of people piercing their bodies.
Aug
4
Jelly Beans and P-Values
The standard criterion for considering a scientific study to be statistically significant is having a p-value less than 5%.
This means that (according to the relevant background theory) there's less than a one in twenty chance that the result in question would have been found merely as a result of chance.
Here's what that can mean in real life:
Aug
3
Sophistry in defense of climate science
Sophistry or Philosophy?
George Marshall discusses some practical advice -- based on research in psychology and sociology -- about how to talk to people if you want to change their minds (as opposed to simply engaging them in arguments).
For one, he says I should call denialists "dissenters" instead of denialists.
It seems like good advice. But it's also worth noting that it's decidedly unphilosophical in some important respects.
Philosophy is all about giving reasons for holding or rejecting a belief. It's about arguments. It's a process that assumes you are interested in rationally engaging with the world.
Marshall is right that many of us don't come to our beliefs through a (purely) rational process. But shouldn't it be an ideal we strive towards?
Aug
2
The transition from dinosaurs to birds
Carl Zimmer at The Loom discusses archeopteryxs' place in the transition between non-avian dinosaurs to birds.
An important part of what makes a bird a bird is the size of its brain. In this respect, Archaeopteryx isn't as closely related to modern birds as you might have thought.
Aug
2
Aug
1
When you say ___, people hear ____.
From a Physics Today article entitled "Communicating the Science of Climate Change.
It's always good to choose your words carefully, but this is especially true when terms used in science have slightly different meanings when used in everyday contexts.
Aug
1