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Category Archives: Basic News
The University Is in Real Trouble, Folks
This is news to no one who’s been paying attention, of course. But this morning I read two articles that highlight some of the difficulties universities are facing today. The first was from Al Jazeera, which seems to be on … Continue reading
Nature Special on The future of publishing: “A new page”.
Nature Special on The future of publishing: “A new page”..
Posted in Basic News, Future of the University, Libraries, Metrics, Open Access
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Computer Scientists Measure the Speed of Censorship On China’s Twitter | MIT Technology Review
Computer Scientists Measure the Speed of Censorship On China’s Twitter | MIT Technology Review.
SRA International :: Sequestration Resource
SRA International :: About SRA International.
Open Access Creative Commons licences for Cambridge Journals « CJO « Cambridge Journals Blog
Cambridge University Press has announced today that articles in its Open Access journals can be published with a Creative Commons Attribution licence (‘CC-BY‘). This licence allows users and readers to download, read, re-use and re-distribute freely, as long as they … Continue reading
Posted in Basic News, Open Access
Tagged Cambridge, Cambridge Journals, CC-BY, Creative Commons, Finch Report, OA, open access, Press, publishing, RCUK, university, wellcome trust
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The Mind of the Innovator: Radio Specials | KQED Public Media for Northern CA
NSF’s public radio doc “Mind of the Innovator” airs on KQED in San Francisco… Innovators begin with real-world problems and find solutions through technology, imagination, hard work and a drive to make our lives better. This special program from Richard … Continue reading
UNT Comic Studies Conference: March 22 & 23, 2013
CSID is proud once again to co-sponsor the biennial UNT Comic Studies Conference. You can download the FULL PROGRAM here. This meeting seeks to overcome the antiquated understandings of comic books as “children’s trash” with no redeeming or literary value. … Continue reading
Posted in Basic News, Calls for papers
Tagged anime, comic, comic studies, conference, DC, graphic novels, manga, Marvel, symposium
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Tiny creatures with the ability to walk on water | The Sun |News
Tiny creatures with the ability to walk on water | The Sun |News.
Posted in Basic News
Tagged ant, dew, environment, grasshopper, nature, nature news, photography, rain, snail, The Sun UK, Vadim Turnov, water
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The looming spectre of differential tuition
Someone can do the relatively simple accounting and see that the humanities–”majors without an immediate job payoff”–are already subsidizing those which have a “job payoff.” In fact, this was already done at few institutions, including UCLA. But this is a … Continue reading
More Scientists-Statesmen?
Only a handful of physicists have reached the halls of Congress. Bill Foster, a particle physicist and businessman just elected as a Democrat to the House of Representatives from Illinois’s newly drawn 11th district, wants this situation to change. The … Continue reading
‘Preparing for Life in Humanity 2.0′ hits shelves just in time for Halloween
Steve Fuller’s latest book, Preparing for Life in Humanity 2.0, hits shelves just in time for Halloween. I find the timing of the book’s release interesting, since it introduces the most frightening philosophic character since Nietzsche’s Übermensch — the ‘moral … Continue reading
MesoFacts & Other Deteriorating Knowledges
[Samuel] Arbesman’s book expands on a piece he wrote in 2010 for the Ideas section of the Boston Globe. That short essay, called “Warning: Your reality is out of date,” laid out a theory of what Arbesman named the mesofact. “When people … Continue reading
Posted in New Books
Tagged facts, information, information proliferation, knowledge, knowledge production, macrofacts, mesofacts, microfacts, research
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Galaxy formation: The new Milky Way : Nature News & Comment
Astronomers are still arguing about the precise sequence of events during the Milky Way’s birth, but every-one agrees that the story began with dark matter. The stuff is everywhere, even though it is invisible and no one yet knows what … Continue reading
Posted in Basic News, TechnoScience & Technoscientism
Tagged big bang, galaxy, milky way, nature news, science
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Is fracking behind contamination in Wyoming groundwater? : Nature News & Comment
The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) sparked a firestorm in December last year when it released a draft report1 suggesting that the use of hydraulic fracturing — or ‘fracking’ — to extract natural gas had contaminated groundwater near Pavillion, Wyoming. Industry … Continue reading
Periodic Fractal of the Elements
Posted in Basic News, Creative & Visual Science
Tagged creative visual, fractal, innovative view, periodic table, science
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The Brain & Beyond: Science, Society, and the Person
The 1980s saw a revolution in psychiatric science, and it brought enormous excitement about what the new biomedical approach to serious psychiatric illness could offer to patients like Susan. To signal how much psychiatry had changed since its tweedy psychoanalytic … Continue reading
Posted in Basic News
Tagged brain, causation, medication, mind, psychiatry, psychology, psychopathology, schizophrenia, scientism, sociology
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Study shows gender bias in science is real… Scientific American Blog Network
Whenever the subject of women in science comes up, there are people fiercely committed to the idea that sexism does not exist. They will point to everything and anything else to explain differences while becoming angry and condescending if you … Continue reading
5 New Technologies That Have Changed The Digital Classroom | Edudemic
In the past, the suggestion of getting a college degree without ever cracking a book meant paying a degree mill. It meant the degree was in name only, reflecting neither learning nor effort. Then distance learning meant correspondence courses, perhaps … Continue reading
On the benefits of a philosophy major « Pleas and Excuses
The blog post below has a very nice graphic which details the proven skills that one obtains with a degree in philosophy. While I am tired of having to justify this over and over, I think it is important to … Continue reading
INIT Interdisciplines virtual seminar on transdisciplinarity
Welcome to the INIT series on Interdisciplines: INIT, the International Network of Interdisciplinarity and Transdisciplinarity, is continuing to host a Virtual Seminar on Interdisciplinary and Transdisciplinary Horizons on the platform Interdisciplines. We invite everyone to participate in a new forum … Continue reading
Coming Next – Doctors Prescribing Apps to Patients – NYTimes.com
Simple apps that track users’ personal fitness goals have already gained wide traction. Now medical professionals and entrepreneurs want to use similar approaches to dealing with chronic ailments like diabetes or heart disease. via Coming Next – Doctors Prescribing Apps … Continue reading
How generous is the UK science budget, really? guardian.co.uk
Whatever you think about spending on sport, in times of austerity or otherwise, there is no denying that the strategy paid off – at least, if your yardstick for success is Olympic medals. The message couldn’t be more clear: if … Continue reading
Posted in Basic News, Broader Impacts, Economics & STEM Research, Globalization, Metrics, Philosophy & Politics, Public Philosophizing, Science and technology ramifications, TechnoScience & Technoscientism
Tagged broader impacts, climate science, global science research, globalizing science, monetary returns, national science research, olympic medals, science budget, technoscientific competition, worldwide recession
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The Veil of Ignorance: How Americans view wealth & inequality – BBC News
When you taste wine and you know the label and you know the price, you are going to be influenced by that. And when you are tasting wine in a blind way, now you don’t have anything to base it … Continue reading
BBC News – Living Pigments
Professor Pettigrew and his colleagues studied 80 of these Bradshaw rock artworks – named for the 19th-Century naturalist who first identified them – in 16 locations within Western Australia’s Kimberley region. They concentrated on two of the oldest known styles … Continue reading
Posted in Basic News
Tagged archaeology, biology, discovery, geology, living pigments
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