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26 Jan 23:02

Henrique Carneiro, da USP, no CID 2013

by tarsoaraujo

Resumo da palestra de Henrique Soares Carneiro, professor de história moderna. Doutor em História social, especialista em historia da alimentação e das drogas.

Carneiro começou lembrando que as drogas não são apenas as ilícitas, mas também o café, a cerveja, o tabaco, o chimarrão, os sedativos e antidepressivos, entre outras. Seguiu lembrando que a droga sempre ocupou ao mesmo tempo, na sociedade, um lugar desgraçado e sagrado, sinônimo de “cura, magia e milagre”.

O professor também observou que o Brasil é um “global player” do capitalismo de drogas, como dono da maior empresa de cerveja do mundo e maiores exportadores globais de tabaco. E que a sociedade contemporânea recorre a substâncias ativas para tudo. “Drogas para trabalhar, para dormir, para fazer sexo”.

O que faz sentido, considerando-se que elas nos acompanham desde a pré-história. “A importância das drogas na cultura humana só é comparável à dos alimentos. E muitas drogas são alimentos-droga, como a cerveja, o vinho e o açúcar.”

Carneiro lembrou que as drogas foram produtos-chave para a expansão do capitalismo entre os séculos 16 e 19, quando a farmácia moderna foi inaugurada e deu ainda mais importância a elas. Também citou o fato de Henry Ford ter ajudado o movimento pela temperança para diminuir a indisciplina nas fábricas. E isso apesar de o cristianismo não vetar o álcool – ao contrário, o primeiro milagre de Jesus é transformar água em vinho, segundo a Bíblia.

Mais tarde é que os cristãos fundariam uma luta pela abstinência que culminaria com a lei seca, nos EUA, e logo na transformação de consumidores de álcool em párias, de criminosos em milionários e da policia em vítima fácil da corrupção.

Com o fim da lei seca, começaria outra guerra, agora contra grupos étnicos minoritários. A maconha era coisa de mexicanos, a cocaína de negros, e o ópio, de chineses. A guerra que surgiu como forma de controlar esses grupos “é talvez a mais duradoura, mais cara e talvez a que tem o maior numero de presos da era contemporânea”.

Carneiro comenta que isso parece estar mudando aos poucos, a julgar pelos avanços dos últimos tempos, com a aprovação das marchas da maconha, com a defesa da descriminalização por ex-presidentes latino-americanos e com o processo de legalização do uso recreativo da maconha nos EUA.

Mas o historiador mostrou preocupação com o conservadorismo expresso, por exemplo, no projeto de lei que tramita na câmara para aumentar as penas para tráfico e legitimar a internação compulsória comunidades terapêuticas religiosas sustentadas por parlamentares, como Marcos Feliciano e o próprio relator do projeto, Givaldo Carimbão.

E manifestou-se contra a internação compulsória. “Será que seria legítimo internar os obesos para que não comam demais?”

Terminou citando o escritor e filósofo iluminista Voltaire: “Todos os excessos são condenáveis, especialmente os da abstinência. Quando ela se torna compulsória, os fundamentos da democracia são pervertidos”.


03 Dec 03:25

YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARGGHHHHHHHH



YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARGGHHHHHHHH

02 May 18:46

durbikins: The year is 2002. You want some sweet techno music. You search “techno” in LimeWire. All...

durbikins:

The year is 2002. You want some sweet techno music.

You search “techno” in LimeWire.

All 482 files found are “Sandstorm” by Darude just labeled as “techno song”.

02 May 18:45

Da preguiça ao ciclope


No Parque Chico Mendes, em Rio Branco, há estátuas de personagens conhecidos do folclore amazônico. Uma delas representa uma criatura peluda com o porte de um grande gorila, com duas orelhas de abano, boca assustadora e um único olho acima do nariz achatado. No lugar do umbigo, há uma outra boca dentada. A estátua, registrada ao lado em foto de Antonio Geraldo Pinto , representa o mapinguari, muitas vezes descrito como um monstro gigante de mais de dois metros, conhecido pelos gritos assustadores e pelo fedor que exala.
30 Apr 19:26

Success in initializing and reading nuclear spins brings quantum computer a step closer

A quantum computer is controlled by the laws of quantum physics; it promises to perform complicated calculations, or search large amounts of data, at a speed that exceeds by far those that today's fastest supercomputers are capable of.
30 Apr 19:23

TIM transforma seus planos de dados 3G em 4G, mas não aumenta franquia

by Felipe Ventura

Assim como a Vivo, a TIM deixou para anunciar seus planos 4G no último dia permitido pela Anatel. E, basicamente, os planos são exatamente os mesmos que antes – sem aumentar a franquia – porém com a velocidade maior da rede LTE.

A TIM explica que todo plano 3G atual será 4G nas seis cidades-sede da Copa das Confederações: Recife, Salvador, Belo Horizonte, Rio de Janeiro, Fortaleza e Brasília.

Se você estiver na área de cobertura – o mapa da TIM ainda não foi atualizado – basta ir em uma loja da TIM e pedir o chip 4G. Ele custa R$10 para quem comprar apenas o chip ou já for cliente; e é gratuito na compra de um smartphone/modem novo.

Claro, você precisa de um dispositivo 4G para usar a rede mais rápida. A TIM já oferece o Motorola RAZR HD (R$ 1.699) e o LG Optimus G (R$ 1.999). Nas próximas semanas, virão o LG Optimus F5 (R$ 1.219), Galaxy Express (R$ 1.349), Samsung Galaxy S4 (R$ 2.499) e BlackBerry Z10 (R$ 2.699). Você também pode comprar aparelhos compatíveis com 4G em outras lojas – o que deve sair mais barato – e adquirir apenas o chip com a TIM.

Para tablets e modems, os planos não mudam: com franquia entre 500MB e 10GB, os preços começam em R$35 mensais. A velocidade nominal do 4G é de 5Mbps, assim como na concorrência. Vale notar que os preços são os mesmos do 3G.

tim-tablet

Para smartphones, nada muda também, o que pode ser um problema. Os planos 4G têm franquia de apenas 300MB ou 600MB, custando até R$34,90 por mês. Há também a opção do Liberty Web Smart, no qual você paga apenas pelo mês que usar – também com franquia baixa, de 300MB. A velocidade prometida também é de 5Mbps.

tim-smartphone

A operadora diz que seus clientes pré-pagos poderão acessar a rede 4G, porém não será a mesma coisa: os planos Infinity Web e Infinity Web Modem limitam a velocidade a 1Mbps.

A TIM diz que vai oferecer 4G compartilhando uma rede unificada com a Oi. Não se trata de alugar parte da infraestrutura: ambas as operadoras terão uma rede só, dividindo antenas e outros equipamentos. Isto deve gerar uma economia de 40% a 60%, além de acelerar a implementação do 4G pelo Brasil.

A operadora garante que, até o fim do ano, atenderá também as cidades de Manaus, Cuiabá, São Paulo, Curitiba, Porto Alegre e Natal. São as sedes e subsedes da Copa do Mundo, que – segundo o cronograma da Anatel - deverão ser atendidas pelo 4G até dezembro. [TIM via Reuters]

Foto por Michael Johnson/Flickr

Atualizado às 17h20

30 Apr 19:22

How to manage motorway tolls through the Game Theory

A team led by José Manuel Zarzuelo, Professor of Applied Economics, has applied the co-operative Game Theory to calculating motorway toll charges. The results of the study have been published in the specialised journal European Journal of Operational Research. In this study, the authors propose that sophisticated mathematical methods could be used in traffic management.
30 Apr 19:17

Big Pic: The Prettiest Aerial Shot Of Phytoplankton You've Ever Seen

by Shaunacy Ferro

NASA captures blooming marine microorganisms off the coast of France.

When conditions are just right in the Bay of Biscay, the body of water nestled in the elbow crook between western France and northern Spain, huge blooms of phytoplankton begin to emerge. The marine microorganisms live in the bay all year, but in the spring, the combination of more sunlight, warmer waters and an influx of nutrients carried by ocean currents and freshwater rivers swollen with melted snow creates explosive blooms--those multi-colored swirls in the water.

The massive population explosion is big enough to see from space, and NASA's Aqua satellite captured this image with the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) earlier this month. The blooms usually die down by May, so this might be one of the last swirly-marine-life photos we get this year.

[NASA]

    


30 Apr 02:29

PhysX PBF: breakthrough in simulation of water

by Luboš Motl
A decade ago, the state-of-the-art computer simulation of moving water looked like the 0:20-0:40 segment of the Mafia I trailer. In the following years, the progress was relatively modest up to very recently.

PC games have become nearly photorealistic but flowing and splashing liquids are still hard. In some sense, one needs to simulate individual (enlarged) molecules and/or the Navier-Stokes equations – both tasks are difficult when it comes to the required computer power etc.



See also a lighthouse etc. and one more bunny bath.

The video above shows what the simulation of water looks like using the newest technologies. A single graphics card, GTX 580 which you may buy for $350, was used to produce the video in real time.




The video uses NVIDIA's Position Based Fluids: introduction, technical paper, pretty much the same approach that was used to simulate moving clothes and other things. See some examples how Mafia II exploited PhysX (2010).




The simulation with the bunny etc. looks almost perfect and some clever and efficient simulation of legitimate physics – especially a better iterative solver to maintain incompressibility – is responsible for this progress. Some additions are sort of cheating from a physics viewpoint, however. The tension-like filaments don't quite appear because of the right formulae for surface tension; they arise because of a new artificial pressure term that looks good but doesn't seem to be given by the right physics formulae.

Vorticity confinement is a new theme that allows to conserve the energy – which you may pump back to the system.

At any rate, because the water simulation looks almost perfectly realistic and water is among the most difficult things to simulate, we may say that we're pretty much entering the era in which your PC at home has all the required power and cleverness to produce videos of reality that may be indistinguishable from the real reality...

See Google News.



Incidentally, the gas explosion in Prague made it to the #1 event on Google News at some moment. (The explosion was caused either by gas or by Sarah Palin. ;-)) It seems excessive because nothing excessively serious has happened, after all. I should have debated some folks in the National Theater last Thursday but I said no at the end, partly because of preparations to a string/LHC mixed talk (2 hours including many questions) I was giving today in Pilsen. Note that the National Theater has burned twice – in the 19th century – and the Czechs always collected new funds to rebuild it. ;-)

The video above is somewhat more realistic and less sorrow because life didn't stop; this one or this one almost reminds me of my visits to Manhattan shortly after 9/11. You may imagine that I know the place extremely well – I am going around the National Theater almost every time when I visit Prague. There's also the Academy of Sciences where I was doing an exam with Prof Niederle as an undergrad and many other familiar buildings whose windows were broken today. ;-)

I suppose that when everyone can smell gas in the street, it's better to run away – and maybe some employees should try to stop the leak and/or extract the gas from the building in some way. I am no expert. It's not even clear to me whether someone breached his duties in any way – whether the existing regulations are supposed to prevent such events.

Prague is significantly richer than Pilsen but I feel that even the supposedly luxurious neighborhood of the National Theater is still sort of dirty relatively to Pilsen. Is it just me?

BTW Czech president Zeman offered one of his classic witticisms in Austria today. He said he's ready to terminate the expansion of our Temelín nuclear power plant – if Austria rents their Zwentendorf nuclear power plan (that was stopped by a modest 50.5% majority in a late 1970s referendum) – but cheaply. By this joke – which wouldn't necessarily have to be a joke if Austrians were a little bit more pragmatic! – Zeman joined the Start Zwentendorf NGO, a brotherly organization of the Austrian Stop Temelín NGO. ;-)

Maybe I shouldn't promote Temelín and its safety a few paragraphs after comments about a gas explosion in Prague? ;-) But I am really not afraid...
30 Apr 02:16

sisterwolf: Sophia Loren, January 1960



sisterwolf:

Sophia Loren, January 1960

29 Apr 20:26

How LinkedIn's Project Inversion Saved the Company

by samzenpus
pacopico writes "Shortly after its 2011 IPO, LinkedIn's infrastructure almost collapsed. The company had been running on decade's old technology and needed a major overhaul to keep up with other social sites. As Businessweek reports, LinkedIn initiated Project Inversion to fix its issues and has since evolved into one of the poster children for continuous development and creating open source infrastructure tools. But the story also notes that LinkedIn's technology revival has come with some costs, including constant changes that have bothered some users."

Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



29 Apr 20:25

Virgin Galactic fez o primeiro teste de voo espacial comercial e foi bem sucedida

by Daniel Junqueira

Estamos entrando na era do turismo espacial. A Virgin Galactic fez hoje o seu primeiro teste com a nave espacial SpaceShipTwo (SS2) e foi bem sucedida – o que significa que os planos do magnata Richard Branson de ir ao espaço estão próximos de se concretizarem – assim como de qualquer outra pessoa cheia de dinheiro.

Na manhã de hoje, na Califórnia, o WhiteKnifghtTwo decolou carregando a SS2 e, 45 minutos e 14,3 km de altura, a SS2 ligou o seu motor de foguete e começou seu voo solo – foram cerca de dez minutos em velocidade supersônica a uma altitude de 16,7 km. Depois disso, a nave pousou com segurança no meio do deserto, finalizando assim o primeiro teste feito pela Virgin com sucesso e dentro do que a empresa planejava.

Com isso, a indústria de turismo espacial nascente consegue mais uma grande façanha, e nos próximos anos devemos começar a ter os primeiros bilionários visitando o espaço. A Virgin Galactic pretende fazer o primeiro teste de “voo espacial completo” até o fim deste ano, e, em 2015 quer dar a chance para quem tem muito dinheiro para gastar fazer uma viagem ao espaço. [Engadget, The Verge, Gizmodo US]

29 Apr 20:24

Cat and mouse: One gene is necessary for mice to avoid predators

A new study involving olfactory receptors provides evidence that a single gene is necessary for a mouse to avoid a cat. A research team has shown that removing one olfactory receptor from mice can have a profound effect on their behavior. The gene, called TAAR4, encodes a receptor that responds to a chemical that is enriched in the urine of carnivores. While normal mice innately avoid the scent marks of predators, mice lacking the TAAR4 receptor do not.
26 Apr 13:58

Vivendo a vida motivada

by Carlos Orsi
Alguma alma caridosa do condomínio em que moro costuma pôr pequenas crônicas motivacionais no quadro de avisos do elevador -- geralmente trocando o texto uma vez por semana. São breves exortações bem-intencionadas, produzidas por um desses gurus engravatados da vida corporativa que, hoje, são mais fáceis de se achar por aí do que fungo em madeira podre, sempre falando como é importante dar duro, ser honesto, tratar bem o cliente, liderar para a vitória, blá-blá-blá, e amar o que se faz. Um texto recente lembrava que "você passa as melhores horas dos melhores anos da sua vida no trabalho" e tentava fazer isso parecer uma coisa boa, como se não fosse, na verdade, uma das constatações mais deprimentes já escritas desde que Jean-Paul Sartre pôs o ponto final em A Náusea.

O que me deixou pensando na relação das pessoas com o trabalho, e em como fomos todos fraudados pelas promessas de transformação profissional que ouvimos lá nos longínquos anos 80. Ou talvez fossem mais antigas? Eu me lembro delas nos anos 80, mas até aí, eu não pensava muito em trabalho antes disso.

Mas, enfim: até algum momento do passado, havia uma distinção entre "trabalho" e "vida". Trabalho era uma coisa que você fazia -- varrer o chão, lavar pratos, apertar parafusos, contar dinheiro -- e vida era o que você era: pai amoroso, marido carinhoso, zagueiro do time de várzea.

Algumas carreiras, principalmente nas artes e na política, fundiam trabalho e vida, enquanto outras, como medicina e jornalismo, tendiam a tornar mais finas as paredes entre as duas esferas, mas esses eram os casos excepcionais. No geral, a coisa seguia uma demarcação clara: da catraca para dentro, trabalho; da catraca para fora, vida.

Não que fosse uma situação confortável. Bibliotecas inteiras já foram escritas sobre os efeitos deletérios da alienação do trabalho, sem falar no filme Tempos Modernos, de Charles Chaplin. H.L. Mencken produziu um artigo cáustico, chamado "A Mente do Escravo", sobre  a cabeça do homem que trabalha apenas para ganhar o sustento, sem nenhum outro objetivo em vista. O sonho de Marx de uma vivência realmente integrada -- onde fosse possível pescar pela manhã, caçar à tarde, criticar à noite -- era uma aspiração mesmo entre os não-marxistas. Profissões, como a de ator ou compositor, onde vida e trabalho pareciam existir numa espécie de fluxo contínuo eram -- como ainda são -- glamurizadas.

A promessa que minha geração ouviu, nos anos 80, era a de que, no futuro, todo trabalho seria assim: existiria em fluxo, e seria possível levar a vida para o trabalho. Parecia uma perspectiva excitante, refrescante, inacreditavelmente humana. Porém, como o talismã maligno do conto A Pata do Macaco, que amaldiçoa seu possuidor ao mesmo tempo em que realiza seus desejos, a mudança teve um preço imprevisto: o de termos de levar o trabalho para a vida.

Isso não é um problema se o que você faz coincide naturalmente com o que você é -- no caso, digamos, de um cineasta ou de um poeta -- mas a coisa fica um pouco mais complicada quando o que se faz é apertar parafusos ou vender ternos. Nem mesmo o patrão sádico do filme de Chaplin esperava que seus funcionários amassem suas porcas e parafusos como um poeta ama sua poesia; ou se mantivessem em prontidão 24 horas para atender o cliente, como o cineasta pode virar a noite acordado esperando o momento exato para sua cena.

Essa é a promessa quebrada: esperávamos que poderíamos todos fazer arte, e em vez disso o que ganhamos foram as mesmas funções maçantes e sem sentido de sempre, mas agora somadas à obrigação de desempenhá-las com todo o zelo e o desprendimento de verdadeiros artistas. Tínhamos acreditado que poderíamos fazer o que amássemos; em vez disso, demos de cara com o dever de amar o que -- o que quer que seja -- que fazemos.

Nesse contexto, o discurso motivacional é uma espécie de Fanta Uva da alma, um doce refresco que tenta convencer as pessoas de que vender um apartamento ou um carro merece a mesma recompensa emocional que pisar na Lua ou compor um poema épico em decassílabos: que o importante não é buscar as aspirações mais nobres, mas considerar nobres as aspirações que estão à mão.

O fato da indústria da motivação não dar mostras de exaustão reflete, talvez, o fato de que o efeito de seu alucinógeno edulcorado é passageiro, de que as pessoas precisam de doses cada vez maiores, e a intervalos cada vez menores, para sustentar o delírio de que o trabalho que fazem é o verdadeiro propósito de suas vidas. De que ser vendedor é mais importante, num sentido profundo, ontológico, do que ser zagueiro no time de várzea.

Enfim, se a solução para a alienação do trabalho é a alienação da vida, será que podíamos ter a primeira de volta, por favor?
26 Apr 05:00

Photo



26 Apr 00:15

20130425GP19



20130425GP19

26 Apr 00:14

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25 Apr 20:47

Amazon earnings: revenues continue to grow, but profits prove elusive

by Ben Popper
Amazon-event-2012-_1174_large

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos has long told his investors that the focus of the company is on growing its business and hunting for big new opportunities, not turning a massive profit. The company reported its first quarter 2013 earnings today, and this trend continued.

The company posted revenues of $16.07 billion for the first quarter, a 22 percent increase over the same period last year. But its profit dipped to $82 million, as compared to $130 million in the first quarter of 2012. Its earnings per share, however, were better than Wall Street expected, coming in at $.18 cents a share.

Part of the reason Amazon's profits are so small is that the company invests heavily in new markets, as well as research and development. It has transitioned...

Continue reading…

25 Apr 20:10

Photo

by pingouingrincheux


25 Apr 17:05

#400ppmday

by Claudio Angelo
A curva de Keeling, batendo nos 400 ppm (Scripps/UCSD)

A curva de Keeling, batendo nos 400 ppm (Scripps/UCSD)

O AQUECIMENTO GLOBAL, esse fenômeno que só existe na cabeça de fanáticos de esquerda como eu e a Angela Merkel, continua a brindar-nos com novas bizarrices para assistir em tempo real. Nos últimos dez anos, nós já vimos o esfacelamento das plataformas de gelo Larsen-B e Wilkins, o encolhimento do mar congelado no Ártico, o degelo superficial de toda a Groenlândia, a temporada de furacões de 2005, duas secas recorde na Amazônia e a volta do Renan Calheiros várias epidemias de dengue. A nova tragédia nos chega com antecipação: em algum momento do mês que vem, poderemos ver a concentração de gás carbônico na atmosfera bater as 400 partes por milhão (ppm) pela primeira vez em pelo menos 850 mil anos. Para comemorar esse dia especial, proponho uma grande celebração na sede da Convenção do Clima da ONU: o 400 ppm Day. Com webcast para a Casa Branca, o Itamaraty e a sede do PC Chinês.

Saberemos que o CO2 chegou lá quase em tempo real, graças à internet e aos esforços incansáveis de Charles David Keeling, um cientista da Universidade da Califórnia em San Diego, EUA, que dedicou sua vida a medir as concentrações do gás num observatório construído no alto do vulcão Mauna Loa, no Havaí. Keeling começou a fazer suas medições em 1958, em dois momentos: na primavera e no outono do hemisfério Norte. A plotagem dos dados produziu um dos gráficos mais famosos da ciência, a curva de Keeling, reproduzida acima. Ela dá a medida da aceleração sem precedentes na história humana das concentrações de gases-estufa produzidas pela queima de combustíveis fósseis e pelo desmatamento nas últimas décadas. Quando Keeling montou seu observatório, o CO2 estava em 318 ppm. Durante toda a era pré-industrial, até onde os registros confiáveis de química atmosférica vão (ou seja, 850 mil anos atrás), ela jamais ultrapassou 280 ppm. Quando eu comecei a cobrir esse assunto, em 2000, ela estava em 360 ppm. Pouco mais de uma década depois, baterá os 400. O Instituto de Oceanografia Scripps, ao qual pertence o observatório de Mauna Loa, inaugurou até um serviço de atualização da curva em tempo real. Com a morte de Keeling, em 2005, o bastão passou para seu filho, Ralph.

A marca, porém, será temporária: a concentração de CO2 chega ao pico sempre na primavera setentrional por causa da decomposição das folhas que caem no hemisfério Norte (onde está a maior parte das terras emersas) no outono e no inverno, e cai à medida que novas folhas sequestram carbono na atmosfera. Isso dá à curva seu padrão característico em serrote, mas basta olhar para ela para perceber qual é a tendência.

E a tendência, como diria Marco Aurélio Garcia, é top-top. Vamos cair um pouquinho na nossa primavera, para ultrapassar a barreira dos 400 ppm para valer no ano seguinte. E 400 ppm, só para registrar, era o limite inferior de estabilização do CO2 na atmosfera para que o mundo tivesse uma chance de 50% de manter o aquecimento global em “apenas” 2 graus Celsius em relação à era pré-industrial neste século. Como nossos diplomatas resolveram deixar esse assunto para 2020, a chance de estabilizarmos o carbono no limite de 450 ppm (ponto médio entre 400 e 500) é, para dizer de um jeito educado, muito pequena.

O legal do 400 ppm Day é que, para comemorá-lo, você não precisará sair da rotina nem fazer esses sacrifícios bobinhos que o Grinpís e os pandas exigem de você uma vez por ano. As sugestões deste blog para marcar a data:

- Tome um banho bem demorado logo de manhã (se o chuveiro for a gás, tanto melhort) e deixe as luzes acesas.

- Saia com seu carro. Se for flex, abasteça com gasolina. Ah, esqueci: você faz isso (quem é que guenta pagar esse álcool, né?).

- Coma um bifão no almoço e agradeça a São Aldo e a Santa Kátia de Palmas pelo novo Código Florestal, que nos deu comida barata e, er…, sustentável.

Como você viu, são coisas que a gente faz todos os dias que garantem o sucesso do 400 ppm Day. Eu, por boa medida, vou aproveitar e abrir um belo Pinot Noir da Borgonha: a cepa tem tido quebras de safra com o aumento da temperatura, mas justamente por isso o vinho tem ficado cada vez melhor.

25 Apr 02:18

Lee Smolin: Time Reborn

by Luboš Motl
An incredible pile of unscientific gibberish

There's one aspect in which Lee Smolin's newest book is less irritating than his previous book, The Trouble With Physics: the main purpose of the new book isn't to mindless attack and lie about the best results of the contemporary theoretical physics research. Instead, if we ignore the mega-arrogant and super-dishonest subtitle "From the Crisis of Physics to the Future of the Universe", "Time Reborn" tries to attack physics from the times of Newton and "constructively" present Smolin's own ideas about physics – or something he apparently calls "physics" – and it's a stinky junk of the most despicable kind, indeed.




You may read some reviews before you decide whether you want to buy this tome or not. But let me summarize some basic points and some characteristic elementary mistakes that may serve as examples of what this pile of paper is all about.




If one suppresses the actual atrocious content of the book, its main thesis may be summarized by the slogan "time is real". What does it mean? Smolin opposes the idea that time may be emergent or the spacetime is doomed – without offering a tiniest glimpse of evidence for his prejudices. Everything must be a slave of time. You may recall his delusions about time-dependent laws of physics – this preposterous and ill-defined concept is given some attention, too.

You might think that the book is therefore a sequence of inconsequential quasi-philosophical babbling that is entirely disconnected not only from the advances in physics of the last 40 years – which was the case of "The Trouble With Physics" – but it is also unrelated to the physics research of the 20th century and probably physics as we have known it for 300+ years. And you would be mostly right. Most of the book is composed of scientifically meaningless words of the author who knows nothing about science but who can't resist to preach about his medieval philosophical prejudices.

But it would be just a part of the truth.

In fact, he does mention some things related to modern physics but almost always negatively so. He makes it very clear that he wants physics, science, and Nature to obey the prejudices of this super-arrogant would-be thinker and he wants to pay no attention whatsoever to what Nature and science research are actually telling us. He is clearly the polar opposite of a good physicist – or an honest human being, for that matter.
Off-topic – surely unrelated to Smolin because related to experiments: LHCb published its paper on the first observation of CP-violation in the decay of \(B_s\) mesons. Via Joseph S.

Dark matter: Some new papers incorporate the three highly persuasive events from CDMS. Frandsen et al. use a Kundera-inspired title to make the remarkable claim that this light dark matter is not ruled out by XENON, thus strengthening the "dark matter is seen" alliance in the dark matter wars. Del Nobile et al. are more negative in their halo-independent analysis. See also an older 2010 paper by Fox, Liu, Weiner. Via Neal Weiner's tweets.
How does it influence his proclamations about physics? For example, he predecides that time has to be fundamental but he also predecides that space is not. He seems to think that he is being told such insights directly from Heaven. However, we've known since the 1905 discovery of the special theory of relativity by Einstein that space and time are related by a symmetry – the Lorentz symmetry – so when it comes to certain properties such as their being "real" or "fundamental", they must have the same properties. How does Smolin deal with this fact?

He simply ignores (and spits on) all the evidence in favor of relativity. The scientific evidence – empirical facts and/or credible observations – never play a role in decisions about his portrait of the world. Well, more precisely, they do play a role – a negative one because Smolin seems to be obsessed with writing gibberish that contradicts the maximal possible number of scientific results.

It's not just relativity that gets spitted upon in this way. All these negative statements are being extrapolated to downright pathological dimensions. So you will find an almost literally endless tirade attacking the concept of symmetries in physics. Symmetries has to be destroyed, Smolin preaches. Every theory that has too many symmetries in it has to be banned. Given the importance that symmetries have played in physics for a century, we can only say one thing: What an amazing imbecile!

Needless to say, Smolin – who has no clue why relativity is not only right but an important finding about Nature – has no chance to understand quantum mechanics which is arguably much more inaccessible to the eternally hopeless laymen such as himself. So there's another endless tirade in which we "learn" that quantum mechanics has to be wrong as well and it will surely be replaced by a hidden variable theory. There isn't a glimpse of evidence supporting this bold claim, either. And all the evidence proving that this statement by Smolin is demonstrable bullshit are completely suppressed.

Even this theme isn't enough for Smolin so it gets generalized. Everything about physics has to be wrong. Moreover, he seems to assume that as soon as he convinces you to agree that something about the current picture of physics will be modified in the future (which is conceivable), you will have to accept his delusions instead (which is not conceivable). No suggestion that his delusions could be wrong as well can ever be found in the book. He behaves like a fungal cell that conspires to eliminate the good bacteria from your guts and instantly wants to occupy their place. Fungi may be hard to fight with but at least some imperfect fungicides and fungistats exist. I am not sure whether there exist efficient enough Smolinocides. At least in the institutions that are supposed to do science, they're badly needed.

The diversity of "obviously right and important" insights of science that Smolin can't resist to attack because they contradict his medieval dogmas is unbelievable. For example, he tells you – without any apologies – that electrons in the Universe are not indistinguishable. To "prove" this point, he says that one electron may be on Earth and another electron may be on the Moon so they're distinguishable.

He both misunderstands what the identical nature of particles means; and why it's true. Or he at least pretends to misunderstand both of these things. Location may effectively distinguish two or several electrons but the point is that if two or several electrons share the same region or come to occupy "states" that are not separated from each other by a "gap", e.g. during a collision or in the atom, we can't say "which one is which one" and connect the electrons in the initial state with those in the final state. For example, in terms of Feynman diagrams, we must sum over all the histories including the possible permutations of all the electrons to get the right result (the right probability amplitude). He can't possibly understand any of this basic undergraduate physics about (anti)symmetric wave functions. Or he understands it but finds it OK to hide all the evidence known to him that unequivocally implies that this whole book is a pile of shit.

If someone writes hundreds of pages of an incoherent text that dismisses not only the Lorentz symmetry, quantum mechanics, and (of course) quantum field theory and string theory (the only other known framework that is capable to reproduce and surpass the successes of QFTs: all these essential facts are totally censored in the book) but also any symmetry and probabilities and almost every other important result of the 20th century physics – such as the indistinguishability of particles – don't you agree that a "hardcore crackpot" is a very accurate description of the person? I don't believe that there exists a competent physicist who doesn't agree that Lee Smolin is a hardcore crackpot – although there may be folks who, probably for egotist reasons, try to hide this understanding of theirs.

The last three chapters resemble a speech of an Islamic fundamentalist preaching before the execution of a heretic who is being stoned to death. There isn't a trace of science in those chapters. It's pure religion and screaming that everyone must act to agree with Smolin's unscientific delusions. Lots of the book is dedicated to would-be arguments that physics shouldn't be studied using mathematics which is apparently "limited" for him.

I originally forgot but Phil Gibbs reminded me about an unbelievable claim in the book – that the best studied approach to quantum gravity is... loop quantum gravity. A somewhat honest crackpot might think various bizarre things, e.g. that loop quantum gravity is more correct, but the fact that string theory is more studied than loop quantum gravity by orders of magnitude is undoubtedly well-known to Mr Smolin so this proclamation has to be a deliberate lie.

The book is so terrible that it got a very negative review from Smolin's other most notorious fellow sourball, too.
25 Apr 02:11

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24 Apr 20:07

Video of a collapsing tin mine next to the ocean in Malaysia (1993)

by Mark Frauenfelder

On Monday, we posted Tim Heffernan's shock-and-awe inspiring article about a collapsed copper pit in Utah. In the comments, gastronaut wrote, "On the upside, at least this mine wasn't right next door to the ocean like a certain tin mine in Malaysia." The video is surreal and horrific.

    


24 Apr 20:05

The Earthiest planets in the universe (that we know of)

by Maggie Koerth-Baker

Last week, Rob told you how scientists announced that they'd found two Earth-like planets orbiting the star Kepler-62. One of those, Kepler-62e, now ranks as the most Earth-like exoplanet we've ever found. Of course, all of this is relative.

What I like about this chart is that it kind of shows you how "Earth-like" doesn't really mean, "Man, that is totally exactly like Earth." Instead, you should translate it more as, "Welp, this is about the closest to Earth that we've found so far." Even Kepler-62e, as you can see, is much larger than the Earth and Mars. And size matters when it comes to actual habitability. As does density — and we don't know what Kepler-62e is made of yet. It's also worth noting that #2 on this list, the infamous Gleise 581g, is really a planet candidate, rather than a planet. We aren't actually certain it exists, just yet.

Popular Science has a neat little breakdown explaining what life might be like on Kepler-62e, if we could go there. But it's worth keeping the context in mind on these Earth-like planets. Don't pack your bags just yet.

    


24 Apr 19:43

Why I Let My Students Cheat On Their Game Theory Exam

by Peter Nonacs/ Zócalo Public Square

Teaching people game theory is good. Making them live it is even better, says UCLA professor Peter Nonacs.

On test day for my Behavioral Ecology class at UCLA, I walked into the classroom bearing an impossibly difficult exam. Rather than being neatly arranged in alternate rows with pen or pencil in hand, my students sat in one tight group, with notes and books and laptops open and available. They were poised to share each other’s thoughts and to copy the best answers. As I distributed the tests, the students began to talk and write. All of this would normally be called cheating. But it was completely OK by me.

Who in their right mind would condone and encourage cheating among UCLA juniors and seniors? Perhaps someone with the idea that concepts in animal behavior can be taught by making their students live those concepts.

The students began to talk and write. All of this would normally be called cheating. It was completely OK by me.Animals and their behavior have been my passions since my Kentucky boyhood, and I strive to nurture this love for nature in my students. Who isn’t amazed and entertained by videos of crafty animals, like Betty the tool-making crow, bending wires into hooks to retrieve baskets containing delicious mealworms? (And then hiding her rewards from a lummox of a mate who never works, but is all too good at purloining the hard-won rewards of others?)

Nevertheless, I’m a realist. Almost none of my students will go on to be “me”—a university professor who makes a living observing animals. The vast majority take my classes as a prelude to medical, dental, pharmacy, or veterinary school. Still, I want my students to walk away with something more than, “Animals are cool.” I want them to leave my class thinking like behavioral ecologists.

Much of evolution and natural selection can be summarized in three short words: “Life is games.” In any game, the object is to win—be that defined as leaving the most genes in the next generation, getting the best grade on a midterm, or successfully inculcating critical thinking into your students. An entire field of study, Game Theory, is devoted to mathematically describing the games that nature plays. Games can determine why ant colonies do what they do, how viruses evolve to exploit hosts, or how human societies organize and function.

So last quarter I had an intriguing thought while preparing my Game Theory lectures. Tests are really just measures of how the Education Game is proceeding. Professors test to measure their success at teaching, and students take tests in order to get a good grade. Might these goals be maximized simultaneously? What if I let the students write their own rules for the test-taking game? Allow them to do everything we would normally call cheating?

A week before the test, I told my class that the Game Theory exam would be insanely hard—far harder than any that had established my rep as a hard prof. But as recompense, for this one time only, students could cheat. They could bring and use anything or anyone they liked, including animal behavior experts. (Richard Dawkins in town? Bring him!) They could surf the Web. They could talk to each other or call friends who’d taken the course before. They could offer me bribes. (I wouldn’t take them, but neither would I report it to the dean.) Only violations of state or federal criminal law such as kidnapping my dog, blackmail, or threats of violence were out of bounds.

Gasps filled the room. The students sputtered. They fretted. This must be a joke. I couldn’t possibly mean it. What, they asked, is the catch?

“None,” I replied. “You are UCLA students. The brightest of the bright. Let’s see what you can accomplish when you have no restrictions and the only thing that matters is getting the best answer possible.”

They could surf the Web. They could talk to each other. They could offer me bribes.Once the shock wore off, they got sophisticated. In discussion section, they speculated, organized, and plotted. What would be the test’s payoff matrix? Would cooperation be rewarded or counter-productive? Would a large group work better, or smaller subgroups with specified tasks? What about “scroungers” who didn’t study but were planning to parasitize everyone else’s hard work? How much reciprocity would be demanded in order to share benefits? Was the test going to play out like a dog-eat-dog Hunger Games? In short, the students spent the entire week living Game Theory. It transformed a class where many did not even speak to each other into a coherent whole focused on a single task—beating their crazy professor’s nefarious scheme.

On the day of the hour-long test they faced a single question: “If evolution through natural selection is a game, what are the players, teams, rules, objectives, and outcomes?” One student immediately ran to the chalkboard, and she began to organize the outputs for each question section. The class divided tasks. They debated. They worked on hypotheses. Weak ones were rejected, promising ones were developed. Supportive evidence was added. A schedule was established for writing the consensus answers. (I remained in the room, hoping someone would ask me for my answers, because I had several enigmatic clues to divulge. But nobody thought that far afield!) As the test progressed, the majority (whom I shall call the “Mob”) decided to share one set of answers. Individuals within the Mob took turns writing paragraphs, and they all signed an author sheet to share the common grade. Three out of the 27 students opted out (I’ll call them the “Lone Wolves”). Although the Wolves listened and contributed to discussions, they preferred their individual variants over the Mob’s joint answer.

In the end, the students learned what social insects like ants and termites have known for hundreds of millions of years. To win at some games, cooperation is better than competition. Unity that arises through a diversity of opinion is stronger than any solitary competitor.

But did the students themselves realize this? To see, I presented the class with one last evil wrinkle two days later, after the test was graded but not yet returned. They had a choice, I said. Option A: They could get the test back and have it count toward their final grade. Option B: I would—sight unseen—shred the entire test. Poof, the grade would disappear as if it had never happened. But Option B meant they would never see their results; they would never know if their answers were correct.

The students learned what social insects like ants and termites have known for hundreds of millions of years: cooperation is better than competition.“Oh, my, can we think about this for a couple of days?” they begged. No, I answered. More heated discussion followed. It was soon apparent that everyone had felt good about the process and their overall answers. The students unanimously chose to keep the test. Once again, the unity that arose through a diversity of opinion was right. The shared grade for the Mob was 20 percent higher than the averages on my previous, more normal, midterms. Among the Lone Wolves, one scored higher than the Mob, one about the same, and one scored lower.

Is the take-home message, then, that cheating is good? Well … no. Although by conventional test-taking rules, the students were cheating, they actually weren’t in this case. Instead, they were changing their goal in the Education Game from “Get a higher grade than my classmates” to “Get to the best answer.” This also required them to make new rules for test-taking. Obviously, when you make the rules there is no reason to cheat. Furthermore, being the rule-makers let students behave in a way that makes us a quintessentially unique species. We recognize when we are in a game, and more so than just playing along, we always try to bend the rules to our advantage.

Morally, of course, games can be tricky. Theory predicts that outcomes are often not to the betterment of the group or society. Nevertheless, this case had an interesting result. When the students got carte blanche to set the rules, altruism and cooperation won the day. How unlike a “normal” test where all students are solitary competitors, and teachers guard against any cheating! What my class showed was a very “human” trait: the ability to align what is “good for me” with what is “good for all” within the evolutionary games of our choosing.

In the end, the students achieved their goal: They earned an excellent grade. I also achieved my goal: I got them to spend a week thinking like behavioral ecologists. As a group they learned Game Theory better than any of my previous classes. In educational lingo, “flipping the classroom” means students are expected to prepare to come to class not for a lecture, but for a question-and-answer discussion. What I did was “flip the test.” Students were given all the intellectual tools beforehand and then, for an hour, they had to use them to generate well-reasoned answers to difficult questions.

The best tests will not only find out what students know but also stimulate thinking in novel ways. This is much more than regurgitating memorized facts. The test itself becomes a learning experience—where the very act of taking it leads to a deeper understanding of the subject.

This article originally appeared on Zócalo Public Square and was republished with permission. Peter Nonacs is a professor in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department at UCLA.

    


24 Apr 05:17

felixinclusis: la-pitonisa-tropical: Mel Odom

24 Apr 05:15

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24 Apr 05:15

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24 Apr 05:13

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