Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
"A stunning survey of the latest evidence for intelligent life on Mars. Mac Tonnies brings a thoughtful, balanced and highly accessible approach to one of the most fascinating enigmas of our time."
--Herbie Brennan, author of Martian Genesis and The Atlantis Enigma
"Tonnies drops all predetermined opinions about Mars, and asks us to do the same."
--Greg Bishop, author of Project Beta
"I highly recommend the book for anyone interested in the search for extra-terrestrial artifacts, and the political intrigues that invariably accompany it."
--David Jinks, author of The Monkey and the Tetrahredron
"Mac Tonnies goes where NASA fears to tread and he goes first class."
--Peter Gersten, former Director of Citizens Against UFO Secrecy
And don't miss...
(Includes my essay "The Ancients Are Watching.")
Join the Posthuman Blues Geographical Matrix!
6 comments:
Better get the Queer Eye team onto it. Not only will they explain how the universe works, but theyll make its bed and buy it a new suit!
The Universe will never know what hit it.
""Now my own suspicion is that the Universe is not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we can suppose."
Probably J.B.S. Haldane's most famous quote, but one which has been "homogenized" (Heh! Scrabblin' for a double entendre word score!) for family consumption and misquoted as "Not only is the universe stranger than we imagine, it is stranger than we can imagine" which in turn is often attributed to Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington, even though there is no record he ever said or wrote that paraphrase of Haldane's documented quote. Now that right there is an example of "high strangeness."
So, as the intro to Dawkin's video bit, it is quite appropriate, especially as concerns the science of quantum mechanics and multiverse theory, and generally how very strange the nature of reality is and may be.
As an aside, Haldane is also famous for the (possibly apocryphal) response he gave when some theologians asked him what could be inferred about the mind of the Creator from the works of His Creation: "An inordinate fondness for beetles."
This is in reference to there being over 350,000 known species of beetles in the world, and that this represents 40% of all known insect species.
An inordinate fondness for beetles.
That just about sums it all up for me! 8^}
c: "drata" -- disturbing, dramatic, difficult data, as in the above, and below:
P.S.--J.B.S. Haldane is also famous for aspects of the mathematics of population genetics, and has something portentous to suggest about directed evolution and the potential consequences of biogenetic manipulation in relation to transhumanism in terms of his original discovery and research into what is termed, in population genetics, genetic load or genetic burden, which is a measure of the cost of lost alleles due to selection (selectional load) or mutation (mutational load).
We'd best be extraordinarily careful when it comes to modifying our own genes in regard to attempting to enhance our native intelligence. Ah'm jes sayin'. 8^}
[References/quotes source: Wikipedia]
Find it hard to take Dawkins seriously since he give up science to become a hysterical polemicist.
Hmm.. an homosexual universe. That's a new twist. I bet Einstein never thought of that!
I was unimpressed. Quantum physics is so wild, yet the biological view is so predictable and even mundane.
He thinks he knows "how it happened" in biology due to Darwin. I think its time for biologists to use some imagination.
Stan
@Tristan Yeah, I agree. I suspect this piece was pre-"God Delusion."
I've said this before but I might as well say it again: if phasing out religious superstition is Dawkins' aim (and a worthy aim it is, IMO), then his current approach is doomed to failure. He needs to ditch the anti-religion schtick and stick to pro-science.
Post a Comment