String theory as both “dream” and “nightmare”
Could we bring back extinct plants?
Michael Egnor to Jerry Coyne: God’s existence can be shown by science methods
Are we living in a vast bubble? Rob Sheldon explains
When the Woke meet up with Darwin…
The Darwinians show their lovely faces in Brazil
Michael Egnor: How a neuroscientist imaged free will (and “free won’t”)
The College Board Exams (Darwin-only evolution) meets COVID-19
BREAKING: Is the 1934 Bayer anti-malarial, Chloroquine, a potential Covid-19 breakthrough treatment?
And, why is that (which was announced yesterday by Mr Trump) not top- of- fold headline news everywhere? Bayer, US, has announced, March 19: >>Bayer today announced it is joining the U.S. Government’s fight against COVID-19 with a donation of 3 million tablets of the drug Resochin (chloroquine phosphate). Resochin, a product discovered by Bayer in 1934 and indicated for prevention and treatment of malaria, also appears to have broad spectrum antiviral properties and effects on the body’s immune response. New data from initial preclinical and evolving clinical research conducted in China, while limited, shows potential for the use of Resochin in treating patients with COVID-19 infection. Bayer in recent days has been in talks with the White House, HHS, Read More ›
One of Darwin’s theories is FINALLY proved? Jonathan Wells explains
Might COVID-19 be a recombinant of two pre-existing viruses?
Isaac Newton and Richard Feynman on ancient sources who thought Earth is a sphere, orbiting the sun
SIR — “Simple” Basics of Epidemics
Here is a simple SIR model — Susceptible- Infected- Removed: Here, “removed” can be by recovery or death. Obviously parameters are not exact so the next level would explore randomised changes in possible values and time varying models; noting particular clusters that give dramatic outcomes. The S(t) line is an inverted cumulative case curve — if people don’t flee. So C(t) = 1 – S(t) is cumulative cases, a logistic curve. C(t) will at first look exponential until resistance and running out of susceptible population leads to saturation. A supplementary equation could partition recovery vs death, and we can work back from observed patterns with infection and deaths. Further analysis could stratify the population as susceptibility varies with factors such Read More ›
Pass me a Corona!
What is going on? I don’t understand the hysteria that is going on. What am I missing? Let’s get some numbers out there. According to the CDC, from September of last year until the end of February this year, 180 days, 18,000 Americans died of the seasonal flu. Starting with March, we have been on high alert, we have been exercising greater hygiene, and, for the last week, we have been quarantining ourselves and spacing ourselves out (a new meaning to the words “being spaced out”). Yet, the CDC just released new numbers, and, over the last roughly 20 days, 4,000 Americans died of the seasonal flu, while only 140 Americans died of the corona virus. That’s a 30 to Read More ›