Thursday, March 3, 2011

http://video.pbs.org/video/1774485437
WATCH THIS!
Yes, I am aware that it's about an hour long...but I promise it won't be a waste of your time...and if you do watch it and find that you were incredibly bored...well...I'm sorry...go eat a cookie...you'll feel better...
This is from a PBS show called Frontline, which is a sort of contemporary documentary program.
For all you pre-med people that are interested in forensics...well, this is for you.
I watched it a few days ago and now I see murders everywhere...=P
Actually I really did find this quite frightening...

Thursday, February 17, 2011

So recently a friend of mine (whose from India) sent me a link to this article:
We ended up getting in a HUGE argument over American policies that extended far too long into the night...
It's a rather stinging commentary on how America has been involved in the Egyptian Revolution. I recommend that you read it AND the comments on it as they are rather good rebuttals...basically I first read the article and was absolutely horrified as an American reader and as to how much of it I actually sort of agreed with.

BE AWARE: this news site, Aljazeera, while an excellent news source for the middle eastern area, is NOT geared toward Americans, the original language of the site is Arabic which should really tell you all you need to know, while they are generally good at being unbiased just be aware that there is a bit of underlying anti-west sentiment (especially toward America). It is the perspective of the Middle East.

In other words, if you've read the article, and you're American, you're no doubt insulted...but here's a few things that you should think about:
How censored American media really is, as the vast majority of Americans don't bother to look at the news from other countries, as it is not considered 'important', you've probably never encountered much like this, no American station would run stuff this stuff.
This article was also written by an American, and while he is considered to be a bit of a paranoid, he is a professor emeritus of International Law at Princeton University and is currently serving his third year of a six year term as a United Nations Special Rapporteur on Palestinian Human Rights. So he's not just some deviant.

While I do think that what this article has to say about America's motives has some merit, I disagree with how violently the article is written, it's also quite one-sided, which is why i highly recommend that you read the comments as well, they help show both sides of the argument.
If you are interested in international politics than I highly recommend Aljazeera to you, just be aware that you are not their target audience...be aware that you are looking through the eyes of the Middle East not America...

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Monday, April 26, 2010

Through the Microscope

Clearly Mark Smith loves to immerse himself in the world of the small. He describes his delight in finding so much life in such a small space. He finds it fascinating how we are connected to these "animalcules", humans have a symbiotic relationship with these millions of microscopic organisms living around us and inside us. We need them and they need us. They help our bodies function properly and we basically provide them with a place to live (us).
While a lot of this article was a little too scientific for me to follow, it did spark my imagination. There is a whole world that we are not able to see without a microscope. And for the most part we never give that world a second thought, if any of us think of it at all, and yet without it we would not be able to survive. It makes me wonder...astronomers are always saying how small the Earth is compared to the universe as a whole. There are even theories that our universe is sandwiched between hundreds if not thousands of other universes. That makes us all very small indeed. So in a way it's all relative...we're just as small as all those little animalcules that Smith talks about.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Evolution

Phelan's theory of how we are currently evolving is quite interesting. I was impressed at the amont of scientific evidence that he had to support his idea, all the examples of ancient DNA and how through comparing skeletons from different regions of the Earth one could get a sense of where and when a genetic mutation occurred, if it was a successful mutation and how and where it spread. I've always had the impression that evolution took place over such a long period of time that it would be close to impossible to actually find DNA that was missing some of the traits that humans have today. I distinctly recall my biology teachers repeating that evolution, if mentioned at all given its religious implications, took place over hundreds of thousands of years and that it took all that time to develop even the smallest of changes. In this article it is shown that the evolution of certain traits occurs much faster than I originally thought. Which is pretty cool...=P

"It makes sense that some alleles present in Europe, Asia, and the rest of the world wouldn’t appear in Sub-Saharan Africa, and vice versa; population flow has not yet had time to spread all alleles to all parts of the world. However, it’s hard for many of us not to hear in Lahn’s musings on brain genes the ugly implication that Africans are inferior. But such was not Lahn’s intention, nor was that his finding. It was not even what he was investigating."

This is the part of the article that interested me the most. Because now that Phelan has shown that Lahn's theory has merit scientifically, he now discusses its implications on the morals of our current culture. All through human history there are stories of different peoples and cultures fighting each other to gain equal status. Clearly this value of equality is incredibly important to us, so now to possibly have scientific proof that some races are truly not equal to others because they have yet to receive a certain gene is worrying to me. In reality, these genetic differences are mostly too small to really cause a noticeable difference in how civilized certain races are compared to others, but the fact that they exist gives people the excuse to discriminate. And from humanity's rather dirty history of discrimination, it's fairly safe to say that an unfortunately large amount of people will use any excuse to make themselves seem better than others. So the introduction of scientific proof that these acts of discrimination may actually be based on fact could be disastrous. Perhaps I'm a pessimist but I get this vision of all the progress we've made to try to accept racial differences being undone and because the cause would be scientific people would be more willing to believe it and it would be much harder to get back to a level of acceptance.
But when you take the time to think about this idea that some populations have evolved past others you realize that it's not quite so simple as saying that one population is better than another. Mutations occur in all human races, so while the Europeans might possess a gene that allows them to drink milk into adulthood that Asians don't have completely, I bet you could easily find another gene that the Asians possess that the Europeans don't have yet. Take Africans for example, probably one of the worst cases of physical discrimination in human history, dating back hundreds of years. Because Africans have dark skin they were considered inferior by all the lighter skinned races when in reality their dark skin gives them a huge advantage over any "white" person. "Black" skin was developed through generations of exposure to the African sun, and defensive evolution against the harm that the suns rays can cause to human skin. Melanin is a chemical in the skin that when exposed to a certain amount of sunlight is basically released to protect the body against said amount of sunlight. Basically melanin is what allows humans to tan. You can think of Africans' melanin as being permanent, they don't have to go through the whole tanning process. They have evolved to have permanent sun protection. They don't have to use sun-screen, they don't get sun burns, and they have much less chance of developing skin cancer than any light-skinned person. Isn't it ironic that the reason "Whites" discriminated against "Black" is also what makes them, in a way, "better" than their discriminators?
I guess what I'm trying to say is that while, yes, there will be certain traits that a certain race will have that others will not; but it goes both ways, the other races will have traits that that certain race does not. So while it might be scientifically proven that certain populations have evolved beyond others in certain ways, this inequality would be canceled out when you take into consideration that while race A does not possess a certain trait that race B does, race A probably has a different trait that race B doesn't have.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

The Art of Blogging

I had never been really that interested in blogs before this class. When I first heard that we had to blog in this class I was like "really....blogging???...puhlease....". My first few blog posts were really monotone and analytical but as I discovered the freedom one can have in writing blogs my posts became more and more casual. I believe that blogging has definitely helped improve my individual "voice" in my writing. I'm writing more and more like how I would discuss a subject out loud in a vocal discussion. Whether that's a good thing or a bad thing is up to you, my readers to decide. I'm still not really into blogging on a regular basis but I definitely appreciate it more than I did before. When you add the comments into the experience it's like having a vocal discussion but without anyone interrupting your ideas, which I think is quite nice, because I've never really been able to hold my ground in vocal discussion, usually other people end up talking over me and I don't particularly like to fight over who gets to speak when, so this whole blogging thing is a much less stressful experience for me.

Ethics and Climate Change

Honestly, I found this article hard to follow. I have never been good at understanding the nuances of economics...
John Broome talks a lot about how we should try to focus on how our current lives will effect those of future generations as opposed to focusing on the here and now. While I agree that we should be aware of possible repercussions we might have on our descendants, I'm a believer in the philosophy that if you help the people around you in the present day that the future will be a better place. So if we were to focus on bettering our world in the present day, than the world would be a better place for future generations as well. So I guess I just don't understand why Broome says that we shouldn't focus on the present day, I mean, how else are we supposed to make the future better if we don't make the present day better? Or perhaps I'm misunderstanding the article...?
Another thing that bothered me was Broome's question, given the choose, would you save a child of the future or a child in the present day? To me this is just not a fair question...its impossible to know what situation this "future child" would be in, so how are you even supposed to chose?? I guess I'd argue that by saving a child in the present day you would indirectly save an entire line of decedents therefore saving one or more future children.