
(Wikimedia Commons public domain image)
Some interesting recent science articles:
It’s interesting to compare this piece
“Scientists Pinpoint Where Dark Matter Is Hiding in the Universe”
to this one:
“What is Dark Matter? Even the Best Theories Are Crumbling”
I like that fact that we’re now learning to read muck from below the seabeds:
“The Earth’s Memory Is Locked in Ancient Seafloor Muck”
An intriguing historical “who [or what] dunnit”:
Indeed, how did anybody survive the nineteenth century? Consider this case of what was, evidently, once considered cutting-edge medicine:
In contemporary science, though, it’s that time of the year:
And here’s a rather longish but extremely thought-provoking essay that ranges far beyond what even the title suggests — including, no less, a passing reference to Utah’s Bingham Canyon open-pit copper mine:
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Browsing through the frequent comments that one especially frenetic misreader of this blog makes (elsewhere) regarding my science-related posts, I’m reminded of a corollary to Murphy’s law:
It is impossible to make anything foolproof because fools are so ingenious.
And here’s a variant of it:
Nothing is foolproof to a sufficiently capable fool.
I’m often informed (usually by anonymous people online who’ve never met me) that I’m a young-earth creationist, that I hate and fear science, and so forth. Now, though, I’ve learned that I believe that, if Charles Darwin was wrong in anything, he was wrong in everything — which, of course, makes me a hypocrite because I don’t hold the founders and leaders of my church to the same completely absurd standard.
Which reminds me of one of my favorite lines from William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream — a line, spoken by Puck, that often seems remarkably apt:
Lord, what fools these mortals be! (III.ii.115)