Category: Science, Physics, and Philosophy of Science

  • “CURT, WHAT IS YOUR POSITION ON THE ORIGIN OF LIFE IN THE UNIVERSE?” —“Where a

    “CURT, WHAT IS YOUR POSITION ON THE ORIGIN OF LIFE IN THE UNIVERSE?”

    —“Where are you on the ‘origins’ questions, life and the universe? Do you think it matters if we are here by chance or by design?”—Matt Lawlor

    As far as I know we are nothing but a consequence of emergent complexity as life is the only known means of defeating entropy – with cooperation a multiplier, communication a multiplier, and intelligence a multiplier.

    So just as we see particles (wave effects) culminating in the components of atoms, culminating in elements, culminating in materials, culminating in cycles, culminating in biology, culminating in advanced life forms, I just see our existence as the net result of trial and error made possible by relatively ideal conditions in our rather rural safe zone in the galaxy in the relatively ideal conditions in this zone of the universe.

    It’s a beautiful thing that we exist, and we exist at this very young stage of the universe, and it’s possible or likely that we are a relatively rare thing in this galaxy if not in the universe, but the fact that sentient life exists is probably a relatively deterministic consequence of the value of conservation of energy in the face of permanent entropy.

    I think we are rare and the only crime we can commit is not seeking to be the gods we can be, in case there are no others yet, because of infrequency of conditions.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-05-01 18:01:00 UTC

  • “Think of how humans have come to discover health. It’s not a checklist of prope

    —“Think of how humans have come to discover health. It’s not a checklist of properly functioning systems but rather the absence of ailments which restrict functions of living below a threshold of overall wellness (over all function). It’s a negativa definition.”—Bill Joslin

    (Perfect.)


    Source date (UTC): 2018-05-01 10:50:00 UTC

  • “What do you think of Ayahuasca Curt?”— Um. I can’t comment on that because I’

    —“What do you think of Ayahuasca Curt?”—

    Um. I can’t comment on that because I’m a science nerd and I have to see something controlled. It’s true that the testimonies coming out of Ayahuasca were similar to those out of lsd, but ketamine came along and now we can pretty much say ‘yeah, these guys aren’t full of it’.

    And at this point it’s not even POSSIBLE it’s psychological. I mean you can’t get that rate of success (+70%) unless the treatment really, really, really, effective. And it’s not effective on the trivial stuff, but on the chronic and devastating.

    Whereas I’d have to argue recreational therapies were more likely taken on by those with less debilitating (if only for the discipline necessary to do it.).

    And the reason I like the therapeutic is because you know if you have ANY chance of falling into schizophrenia or psychosis TRIPPING WILL MAKE IT HAPPEN. And then you’re permanently fucked. So that’s why I prefer the managed therapy.

    I would have no problem microdosing myself if I got it from a fellow supergeek that was a long time practitioner. But otherwise I’d question the providence and be too worried to do it.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-29 10:57:00 UTC

  • “Sorry Global Warming Alarmists, The Earth Is Cooling” by Peter Ferrara, Forbes

    “Sorry Global Warming Alarmists, The Earth Is Cooling”

    by Peter Ferrara, Forbes Magazine

    Climate change itself is already in the process of definitively rebutting climate alarmists who think human use of fossil fuels is causing ultimately catastrophic global warming. That is because natural climate cycles have already turned from warming to cooling, global temperatures have already been declining for more than 10 years, and global temperatures will continue to decline for another two decades or more.

    That is one of the most interesting conclusions to come out of the seventh International Climate Change Conference sponsored by the Heartland Institute, held last week in Chicago. I attended, and served as one of the speakers, talking about The Economic Implications of High Cost Energy.

    The conference featured serious natural science, contrary to the self-interested political science you hear from government financed global warming alarmists seeking to justify widely expanded regulatory and taxation powers for government bodies, or government body wannabees, such as the United Nations. See for yourself, as the conference speeches are online.

    What you will see are calm, dispassionate presentations by serious, pedigreed scientists discussing and explaining reams of data. In sharp contrast to these climate realists, the climate alarmists have long admitted that they cannot defend their theory that humans are causing catastrophic global warming in public debate. With the conference presentations online, let’s see if the alarmists really do have any response.

    The Heartland Institute has effectively become the international headquarters of the climate realists, an analog to the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). It has achieved that status through these international climate conferences, and the publication of its Climate Change Reconsidered volumes, produced in conjunction with the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC).

    Those Climate Change Reconsidered volumes are an equivalently thorough scientific rebuttal to the irregular Assessment Reports of the UN’s IPCC. You can ask any advocate of human caused catastrophic global warming what their response is to Climate Change Reconsidered. If they have none, they are not qualified to discuss the issue intelligently.

    Check out the 20th century temperature record, and you will find that its up and down pattern does not follow the industrial revolution’s upward march of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), which is the supposed central culprit for man caused global warming (and has been much, much higher in the past). It follows instead the up and down pattern of naturally caused climate cycles.

    For example, temperatures dropped steadily from the late 1940s to the late 1970s. The popular press was even talking about a coming ice age. Ice ages have cyclically occurred roughly every 10,000 years, with a new one actually due around now.

    In the late 1970s, the natural cycles turned warm and temperatures rose until the late 1990s, a trend that political and economic interests have tried to milk mercilessly to their advantage. The incorruptible satellite measured global atmospheric temperatures show less warming during this period than the heavily manipulated land surface temperatures.

    Central to these natural cycles is the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO). Every 25 to 30 years the oceans undergo a natural cycle where the colder water below churns to replace the warmer water at the surface, and that affects global temperatures by the fractions of a degree we have seen. The PDO was cold from the late 1940s to the late 1970s, and it was warm from the late 1970s to the late 1990s, similar to the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO).

    In 2000, the UN’s IPCC predicted that global temperatures would rise by 1 degree Celsius by 2010. Was that based on climate science, or political science to scare the public into accepting costly anti-industrial regulations and taxes?

    Don Easterbrook, Professor Emeritus of Geology at Western Washington University, knew the answer. He publicly predicted in 2000 that global temperatures would decline by 2010. He made that prediction because he knew the PDO had turned cold in 1999, something the political scientists at the UN’s IPCC did not know or did not think significant.

    Well, the results are in, and the winner is….Don Easterbrook. Easterbrook also spoke at the Heartland conference, with a presentation entitled “Are Forecasts of a 20-Year Cooling Trend Credible?” Watch that online and you will see how scientists are supposed to talk: cool, rational, logical analysis of the data, and full explanation of it. All I ever see from the global warming alarmists, by contrast, is political public relations, personal attacks, ad hominem arguments, and name calling, combined with admissions that they can’t defend their views in public debate.

    Easterbrook shows that by 2010 the 2000 prediction of the IPCC was wrong by well over a degree, and the gap was widening. That’s a big miss for a forecast just 10 years away, when the same folks expect us to take seriously their predictions for 100 years in the future. Howard Hayden, Professor of Physics Emeritus at the University of Connecticut showed in his presentation at the conference that based on the historical record a doubling of CO2 could be expected to produce a 2 degree C temperature increase. Such a doubling would take most of this century, and the temperature impact of increased concentrations of CO2 declines logarithmically. You can see Hayden’s presentation online as well.

    Because PDO cycles last 25 to 30 years, Easterbrook expects the cooling trend to continue for another 2 decades or so. Easterbrook, in fact, documents 40 such alternating periods of warming and cooling over the past 500 years, with similar data going back 15,000 years. He further expects the flipping of the ADO to add to the current downward trend.

    But that is not all. We are also currently experiencing a surprisingly long period with very low sunspot activity. That is associated in the earth’s history with even lower, colder temperatures. The pattern was seen during a period known as the Dalton Minimum from 1790 to 1830, which saw temperature readings decline by 2 degrees in a 20 year period, and the noted Year Without A Summer in 1816 (which may have had other contributing short term causes).

    Even worse was the period known as the Maunder Minimum from 1645 to 1715, which saw only about 50 sunspots during one 30 year period within the cycle, compared to a typical 40,000 to 50,000 sunspots during such periods in modern times. The Maunder Minimum coincided with the coldest part of the Little Ice Age, which the earth suffered from about 1350 to 1850. The Maunder Minimum saw sharply reduced agricultural output, and widespread human suffering, disease and premature death.

    Such impacts of the sun on the earth’s climate were discussed at the conference by astrophysicist and geoscientist Willie Soon, Nir J. Shaviv, of the Racah Institute of Physics in the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Sebastian Luning, co-author with leading German environmentalist Fritz Vahrenholt of The Cold Sun.

    Easterbrook suggests that the outstanding question is only how cold this present cold cycle will get. Will it be modest like the cooling from the late 1940s to late 1970s? Or will the paucity of sunspots drive us all the way down to the Dalton Minimum, or even the Maunder Minimum? He says it is impossible to know now. But based on experience, he will probably know before the UN and its politicized IPCC.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-27 22:37:00 UTC

  • Given the age of the universe, the number of generations of stars necessary to c

    Given the age of the universe, the number of generations of stars necessary to create fundamental elements, the time it took to produce simple life on earth, the relative pacifism of our region of space, and the strangely beneficial acceleration of evolution due to catastrophes, it is just more likely that we are either the first or one of the first complex life forms. Now, given the rather rapid rate at which we developed technology once crossing the linguistic and intellectual chasm, means that assuming a life form can continue to harness increasing amounts of energy, it’s possible that there are others, and it’s possible that there are others ahead of us. But I am increasingly convinced that if such life exists, their means of using that energy is not yet available to us – we are still too early in our understanding of the universe. That said, I think it is even more likely that we’re very early.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-24 19:42:00 UTC

  • As I read the findings, and I doubt I err, the earliest hominids CAN be explaine

    As I read the findings, and I doubt I err, the earliest hominids CAN be explained by sporadic sampling but until we have bretter sampling we won’t know. And in my unenviable position as a specialist in policing scientific overstatement I am doing my job. ie: we don’t know yet.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-24 00:30:45 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/988575938605707264

    Reply addressees: @Paleophile @katewong

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/988530555057770498


    IN REPLY TO:

    Original post on X

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    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/988530555057770498

  • it doesn’t challenge it at all it just says the record it too incomplete to elim

    it doesn’t challenge it at all it just says the record it too incomplete to eliminate doubt. absence of evidence is not evidence of absence & it is very hard to posit other than geographic and climate differences. that we die, drift and select at different rates doesn’t conflict.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-23 20:30:21 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/988515441567027210

    Reply addressees: @katewong

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/988513914580238337


    IN REPLY TO:

    @katewong

    New study challenges the notion that climate change drove diversification of early human species, suggests that the apparent pattern of diversity can instead be explained by uneven sampling of the human fossil record https://t.co/hV2ZGYbtPw

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/988513914580238337

  • Untitled

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4970214/95-plastic-oceans-comes-just-TEN-rivers.html


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-22 21:11:00 UTC

  • Nothing can only equal everything or else nothing cannot exist. 😉

    Nothing can only equal everything or else nothing cannot exist. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-22 09:52:00 UTC

  • Asymmetry in Our Confidence of Scientific Discovery

    The principle success in the physical sciences is the publication of many findings that eventually converge (possibility) or diverge (falsehood). We know we cannot intuit the first principles of the universe – although IMHO we are getting close to returning to ‘ether’ lol. But when in matters of biology, sentience, and cooperation, we cannot STOP ourselves from intuiting answers, and as such we attempt to propose conclusions too early. Worse, we cannot even compose tests that do not in and of themselves produce desired answers. We simply do not know how to. So in both the imperceptible physical world, the imperceptible sentient world, and the imperceptible cooperative (social/political/economic) worlds, we are equally blind. The problem is we think we are unequally blind. Anything you intuit that conflicts with the least-cost algorithm of nature is wrong. Nature can’t choose. She does what is cheapest, and what is cheapest is the first available transformation. Apr 18, 2018 1:02pm