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O’Leary for News’ other blog Defamation law must catch up with internet age. Any blogger who linked to a website held to contain defamatory material—whether the blogger knew the fact or not—could be at risk. Android apps to control your teen’s brain? This’ll never beat the bicycle Ban the cell phone monster from normal conversation Everywhere we go, people tippy tap devices, paying little attention to the people who surround them. What really underlies five-star reviews? Often a possibly illegal publicity campaign Do poll results matter in the Internet age? Probably not, and it is worth knowing why not. How many kids have smartphones? And what difference does it make?

What IS information, when so many sciences disagree?

From the Christian Scientific Society: We will be having a regional meeting again this year, November 13-14 in Seattle, at the Discovery Institute. This year’s meeting in on the topic “What is Information?” This question seems to keep coming up. At the annual meeting in Pittsburgh, J.P. Moreland argued that information must have a spiritual/non-physical aspect. Randy Isaac has argued that there is no information in biological systems because information presumes communication between intelligent agents. Bill Dembski has argued that information can never be spontaneously created, only destroyed, except by an intelligent agent. In the physics world, information is viewed as exchangeable with energy. We have six speakers who will be addressing different aspects of this topic: Friday night: Doug Read More ›

Creation-Evolution Headlines on natural selection

Time to ditch natural selection? If NS were a law of nature, we would see every organism trending along the same trajectory: for instance, bearing more offspring. But NS explains opposite outcomes with equal ease (see Oct 1 entry for examples). It explains why the sloth is slow and the cheetah is fast. It explains why the roundworm is round and the flatworm is flat. It explains why some animals bear lots of young and why some bear few. We are led to believe that NS explains up, down, in, out and sideways by some mysterious, aimless force, and whatever results was caused by NS. For some time now, I have been calling NS the “Stuff Happens Law” because NS Read More ›

Claim: Crows fear death

From BBC News, reporting on an interesting experiment: These results show that crows will avoid an area or thing that is deemed dangerous to their own species. In other words, they know what death is and know to fear it. No. Crows are smart birds and learn quickly to avoid danger. But they don’t “know what death is” because, as noted earlier, “death,” unlike danger, is an abstraction. Just like “irreversible.” “It tells us that crows view death, at least in part, as a ‘teachable moment’ to borrow an anthropomorphic phrase. It’s a signal of danger and danger is something to be avoided,” explains Swift. This work is another example of how crows have evolved to live so successfully with Read More ›

Review of Peter Harrison’s The Territories of Science and Religion

We’ve been short on religion news recently, due to many new atheists seemingly going to relationship counselling instead of going to law with each other or having rows in elevators , and Richard Dawkins deciding to rant constructively for once (about the decline of intellectual freedom at universities) 😉 But here’s a review worth reading of a book on science and religion: This brings us back to an earlier question: who stands to benefit from this reconfiguration of religio as “religion” and scientia as “science”? And who benefits from the endurance of the conflict myth? This is where Harrison’s nuanced attention to contingency is perhaps most illuminating. As he persuasively points out, in 17th-century England we see Christianity sowing the Read More ›

Is there a smallest unit of length?

Interesting discussion from NOVA: Zeno’s paradox is solved, but the question of whether there is a smallest unit of length hasn’t gone away. Today, some physicists think that the existence of an absolute minimum length could help avoid another kind of logical nonsense; the infinities that arise when physicists make attempts at a quantum version of Einstein’s General Relativity, that is, a theory of “quantum gravity.” When physicists attempted to calculate probabilities in the new theory, the integrals just returned infinity, a result that couldn’t be more useless. In this case, the infinities were not mistakes but demonstrably a consequence of applying the rules of quantum theory to gravity. But by positing a smallest unit of length, just like Zeno Read More ›

Filmmaker: Science as storytelling

Interesting new book by scientist/filmmaker Randy Olson from U Chicago Press: Ask a scientist about Hollywood, and you’ll probably get eye rolls. But ask someone in Hollywood about science, and they’ll see dollar signs: moviemakers know that science can be the source of great stories, with all the drama and action that blockbusters require. That’s a huge mistake, says Randy Olson: Hollywood has a lot to teach scientists about how to tell a story—and, ultimately, how to do science better. With Houston, We Have a Narrative, he lays out a stunningly simple method for turning the dull into the dramatic. Drawing on his unique background, which saw him leave his job as a working scientist to launch a career as Read More ›

Science needs metaphysics?

So then Hawking’s attack on philosophy was misguided? From Nautilus: Science can’t tell us whether science explains everything. … Even the greatest scientists have seen that the intelligibility of the world is a mystery. Actually, it is generally the greatest scientists who do get that. It’s the talk show poseurs who don’t. The logical independence of physical reality from mind and understanding gives science its point. The problem, as philosophers over the centuries have pointed out, is that this can open wide the gate to skepticism. If we are embedded in a reality that can be beyond our reach, how can we hope to achieve any knowledge at all? Perhaps Kant was right, and what we think we know may Read More ›

He said it: Fitness in biology is elusive

Here: “Yes, fitness is the central concept of biology, but it is an elusive concept. Almost everyone who looks at it seriously comes out in a different place. There are literally dozens of genuinely different definitions, which I won’t review here. At least two people have called fitness indefinable, a biological primitive. (A primitive is an undefined initial term in logic.) I don’t think that helps. Stearns (1976) once described it as ‘something everyone understands but no one can define precisely.’ Or is it that we can’t define it because we don’t understand it?” – L. Van Valen, “Three Paradigms of Evolution,” Evolutionary Theory 9 (1989):1-17. See also: Natural selection: Could it be the single greatest idea ever invented? and Read More ›

Dawkins and Maher on intellectual freedom

Here: Dawkins worries about the way US university campuses are becoming places for unlearning liberty. Well yes, but neither Dawkins nor Maher seems able or willing to understand that progressivism is not about liberty; it is about control of an increasingly subject and dependent population. They congratulate themselves on being “liberals,” but might find out the hard way that progressives are not liberals in any classical sense. Note:  I was originally alerted to this item by a friend who noted, in what may have been an earlier version of the clip (I saw it), that they started by focusing on how wrong the idea of design in nature is.  Can’t currently find that version at Mediaite.  

“Living fossil” nautilus sighted again

From New Scientist: Living fossil nautilus re-emerges after 30 years of hiding Ward, who is a biologist at the University of Washington in Seattle, and his colleague Bruce Saunders first described A. scrobiculatus in 1984. Its shell shape looks unwieldy compared with the more streamlined shells of other animals in the Nautilidae family, but it appears to have evolved that way relatively recently. “It turned on its head what we thought of as primitive,” says Ward. Stop using the term “primitive.” What does it mean anyway? See also: Species assumed to be extinct sometimes turn up again. In part, this is probably due in part to the relatively shorter time today before extinction fears arise. For example, “They swim just Read More ›

Larry Krauss on Ben Carson’s “scientific ignorance”

Here: Perhaps his silliest statements have to do with our own solar system. Carson claims that our solar system is perfectly ordered—but, in fact, the motion of the planets is chaotic in the long term, and, although we can predict the motion of comets over the seventy-year period he discusses, for longer time horizons, such as millions or billions of years, the complexity of our solar system makes that practically impossible.More. If it isn’t perfectly ordered, why is there so much life here, but we are forever hearing about endless other habitable planets that turn out probably not to be. Anyway, fine words from a crackpot cosmologist who thinks all scientists should be militant atheists . Election season brings ‘em Read More ›

More on selective hyperskepticism — answering the “Jesus never existed” historical fallacy

It is important, as we go on to deal with understanding the deadlock on discussions about design theory, to understand how many evolutionary materialists and fellow travellers address evidence and reasoning. For example, in recent weeks, here at UD, we have had to address how not even self-evident first principles of reason are regarded by many objectors to design thought. Similarly, once record (or testimony) does not fit the preferred narrative, it is going to be dismissed as inadequate and/or delusional or as suspected of fakery.  In effect, after all, our senses and perceptions are not utterly reliable, so if something does not fit the lab coat clad evolutionary materialist narrative, something must be wrong. The case of Jesus of Read More ›

Barry, in response to “MSN Lies About the Oregon Shootings”

Where you write, Later in the story we learn that no one believes the shooter was motivated by religious rage. Rather, he was motivated by anti-religious rage and singled out Christians for death. MSN’s writers and editors are shameless, utterly shameless. I’ve tried to get cred to say this in Canada on the eve of an election, but apparently can’t, so must say it here*: Briefly, I suspect, MSN personnel are simply responding to the desires of their present and probable future viewers: – No party wants the votes of serious Christians or observant Jews any more. Or thoughtful atheists. No one cares what we think. Our rights can be so easily stripped and our property taken or taxed away. Read More ›